Daily Reflector, December 11, 1983


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Friday Evening

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(NICK) Yon Cant Do Hat On

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Black Beauty (USA)Dragnet 7; 0 Hogans Heroes 8:OOOSaperbook SSBasss

O Billy Graham Christmas Special

d) P.M. Magazine A visit to the "One Day At A Time set on the occasion of its 200th taping; GMs traffic safety manager offers tips on being a good driver.

O O Mr. Smith O 0 Johnny Cash Christmas

IMS Merle Haggard, Ricky Skaggs, June Carter Cash and members of the Carter family join Johnny Cash for a tribute to the Carters influence on country music, culminating in a yuletide celebration at the family fold in Maces Spring, Va. (1 hr.)

0 Camp Meeting. U.S.A.

0 Washington Week In Review (SPN) Money Talb (SHOW) Movie Porkys" (1981) Dan Monahan, Mark Herrier. Randy high school boys seek vengeance on a sleazy cathouse that refused them admittance. R(Ihr., 35 min.)

(BS^ NFL Game Of The Week

(ETO) Movie The Secret Of NIMH (1982) Animated. Voices of Elizabeth Hartman, Dorn DeLuise. A secret society of rats aid a desperate field mouse in saving her home from the ruthlessness of man. G (1 hr., 20 .

(NICK) The llilrd Eye Under The MounUin Aware of ie fate awaiting Earth, the twins learn from Mr. Jones the strategy they must employ if their planet is to be saved. (Part 6) (USA) Pick The Pros Sportswriters preview games and viewers compete for prizes. 8:OS0 Movie My Side Of The MounUin (1969) Ted Eccles, Theodore Bikel. A gentle folk singer befriends a 13-year-old fanflHian boy who retreats to the mounUins to do some soul-searching. (2 hrs., 5 min.)

8:300 City Hut Fo^ About ChristmM Animated. A crafty mayor plots to put an end to Christmas.

O0 Webster (SHealthBeat ^    ,

O O Jennifer Slept Here Jennifer helps Joey out of a tough spot with the school bully.

0 WaU ttreet Week Forto Guest; Malcolm S. Forl^. chairman and editor-in-chief, Forbe,Ina

Qiuat American Dinners Review(R)

The Dally routines by 11 up-and-coming performers Uped at Manhat-tens Greene Street Cafe. (1 hr.) 10J)3(N1CK) First Edition Guest: Louis Auchincloss, autlKH- of Exit Lady Masham, an historical novel about the court of 18th-Century Qu^ Anne and the queens lady-in-waiting. 10:100 News 10:30 OBlondie 0BenHaden 10:30 (NICK) Women In Jazz: Tte Vocaliste Ycrterday And Today 11:000 Another Life (DSoap

OOO0News

0Eari Paulk 0DoctorWho (SPN) Scuba World

Reflector, Greenville, N.C. . Sunday, December 11,1983 TV-9

Monday-Friday Daytime Cont

(NICK) The Tomorrow People

"Hitler's Last Secret The Tomorrow People come face to face with Hitlers terrifying legacy. (Part 2)

(USA) Spurts Probe 0:000 700 Oub O O 0 NFL FootbaU New York Jets at Miami Dolphins (3 hrs.)

d) Childien Between Life And

Death Carol Lawrence and Art Linkletter host this look at the children of East Africa and their struggle for survival. Gueste: Dick Van Patten, William Shatner, Dean Jones, Efrem Zimbalist Jr. (1 hr.)

O O Movie 0h God! Book II (1980) George Bums, Suzanne Pleshette. God returns to Earth and chooses the young daughter of an advertising executive to spread his message to the world. (R)(2hrs.)

O 0 Dallas Clayton and Miss Ellie announce their engagement at the annual Ewing barbecue. (1 hr.)

0JimBakker 0 Victory At Sea (SPN) Looking East (NICK) The Greeks This documentary on Greek history demonstrates the debt Western Qvi--lization owes to this ancient culture. (Part 3) (1 hr., 5 min.) (USA) Boxing Live from Tampa, Fla. (2 hrs.)

9:300 World War I (HBO) Video Jukebox Christmas 10:00 d) News O 0 Falcon Crest

0 Lester SumraU Teaching 0 Nature Amate: The Great Fig Tree The majestic fig tree which rises above the lush rain forest of Belize in Central America is viewed. (1 hr.)

(SPN) Scandinavian Weekly (SHOW) Movie Fast Times At Ridgemont High (1982) Sean Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh. Students at a typical American high school confront the challenges of adulthood, drugs, sex and schoolwork. R (1 hr., 30 min.)

(ESPN) The World Sportsman

Peter Benchley goes to the Johnstone Straits between Vancouver Island and the Canadian mainland to observe the unusual habitat and habits of the the killer whale; NHL star Denis Potvin and Curt Gowdy fish for sea trout in Norway, Cheryl Tiegs takes part in a rescue project focusing on the rare and beautiful whooping crane. (R) (1 hr.)

(HBO) On Locstioa The Eighth Annual Young Comedians Show John Candy hosts this edion of the series featuring

(HBO) e Hitchhiker SpUt Decision

(USA) Night Flight Featured: The Greatful Dead in concert. (Taped on 10/31/80 at Radio City Music Hall in New York). (4 hrs.)

11:030 All In The Family 11:13 (ESPN) Top Rank Boxiiig (R) 11:23 (MCK) Nightcap Topic: the business of books. Guests: Gay Tlese, author of Honor Thy Father; Judith Rossner, author of Looking For Mr. Goodbar; Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, book critic.

11:30 ODobieGillis d)Thicke Of The Night O O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guest: Andy Williams. (1 hr.)

O Movie The Awakening Of Candra (1981) Blanche Baker, Cliff DeYoung.

0 Enteriaiuia Tcsight An interview with David Soul (The Yellow Rose).

0Lifeguide

0 Monty Pythons Flying Orcus

(SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoon (SHOW) Rkk Springfield In Concert Springfield sings Jesses Girl and other hits in a performance from the new Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles. (1 hr., 30 min.)

(HBO) Movie Porkys (1981) Dan Monahan, Mark Herrier. Randy high school boys seek vengeance on a sleazy cathouse that refused them admittance. R(lhr., 35 min.)

11:330 The Catlins 12:000 Bums And Allen OO0News

0 Hiis Week Id Country Music 0 JimBakker (SPN) Life Of Riley 12:030 Night Tracks 12:30 00 Friday Night Videos

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(Continued From Page 4) OS-M Contact (SPN) Crafts N* TUi0 (Tne) Sewing With Nancy (Wed) American Baby (Thu)

(SHOW) Acnbidae (Mon, Wed, Fri)

(SHOW) Movie (Tue) The Deep (1977)

(SHOW) Footlight Fnnsy (Tha) (ESPN) Soccer (Hm) PGA GoH

(Fri)

(HBO) Movie (Fri) Right Of Way (1983)

(NICK) Todays Special (USA) Sonya 2:300 At Home With Beveriy Nye (Mon) Great American Dinners (Tue) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Cleaning Up Your Act (Thu) Keepiiag Time (Fri)

(ImlAt(Fri)

O0&pttol

0 The Lesson (Mon) Oral Roberts (Tue) Pattern For Living (Wed) How Can I Uve? (Thu) Good News (Fri)

0 What On Earth (Ilta) Equal Justice (Tue) Educational Programming (Wed) Kinetic Kame-val (Thu) Case Studies (Fri)

(SPN) Medttemiiean Echoes (Mon) Japan 120 (Tue, Thu) Scandinavian Weekly (Wed) Holland On SateUitc (Fri)

(SHOW) Movie (Mon) The Wild Pony (1980)

(SHOW) The Folk Music Reunion (Wed) Rick Springfield In Concert (Fri)

(ESPN) SideUnes (R) (Wed) Australian Football (R) (litu)

(HBO) Movie (Tue) The Last Unicom (1982)

(HBO) Mens Gymnastica (Wed) (NICK) Dusty* Treehonse 3:33 0 Woman Watch (Wed)

S:oti 7GvCbdi O O 0 General Hospital d) He-Man And Masters Of The Univene

O O Match Game / HoUy-wood Squares Hoar O0Guidiiig Light 0PTL Seminar 0 Over Easy (Mon, Wed, Fri) Staff Development (Tue, Thu) (ESPN) SkUng (Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Mon) Vanishing Wilderness (1974)

(HBO) Rich Little* Christmas Card (Tha)

(NKX) Whit Win ney Think or Next? (Mon, Wed, Fri) Kids Writes (Tue, Thu)

(USA) Alive And Well! lO30Fnntime 3:31(1) The FUntstones 0 PreCED (Mon) GED (Tue, Thu) To Be Announced (Wed, Fri)

(SPN) Hello Jenisslem (Wed) Susan Noon Profiles (Fri)

(HBO) Video Jqjebox Christmas (Wed)

(NICK) Yob Cant Do Hiat (M Televiaioa (Mon, Wed, Fri) Going Great (Tue, Thu)

3:330 The FUntstonea 4:00 OAnoier Life O Whats BappeniBgi! (Mon-Thi) The Christmas Raccoans (Fri)

O Woody Woodpecker And Friends

d) Tom And Jerry O Little House On Hie Prairie O Witney Ihe Hobo O The Waltons 0 Eight Is Bnongh 0Cartoons

0 Today with Lerter Swarail (Mon) Kenneth Copeland (Tue) 'Westbrook Hospital (Wed) Calvary Temple Hour (Thu) Jimmy Swaggart(Fri)

0 Sesame Street (R)g (SHOW) Someones In The Kitcben With Jamie (Wed) (SHOW) Movie (Thu) A Boy Named Charlie Brown (1969) (SHOW) Santas Magic Toy Bag (Fri)

(]KPN) lodeoendence Bowl (Toe) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Thu) SportsWeek (R)(Fri)

(HBO) Movie (Tue) Heidi (1965XFri) The Last Unicom (1982)

(HBO) B.C.: A ^ledal Christmas (Wed) The Snowman (Thu) (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty 4:030 The Munsters (SHOW) Thunderblrds 3088 (Tne)

4:30eBullseye O CHIPS Pstiol OGood Times (Continued On Page 12)





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5-C. Country Catch-Alls with wooden utensils and a metal whisk.

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5-D. 4-Piece Cookware Set of oven-to-table stoneware. Includes: covered casserole, au gratin dish and c 4 ^ open baker. Gift-boxed, set.. IU 5-E. Wood/Rattan Kitchen Organizers. Towel holder with shelf, 3-tier or 2-compartment letter holders and spice rack. Gift-boxed, each... .^O 5-F. Ceramic Towel Holders in 3 styles. Each is gift-boxed.

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8(1-12) .





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Tabletop appliances

Two-siice toaster, reg.

Electric knife, reg. $19.99

Five-speed hand mixer, reg. $19.99

4-qt. hot air corn popper, reg. $19.99

Steam/dry iron, reg. $16.99

Can opener with built-in knife sharpener, reg. $19.99

10-cup drip coffeemaker, reg. $24.99

6-qt. popcorn popper, reg. $19.99

Yuletide gifts

Some appliances sold by special order in Ashland. Shelby and Williamson.

50% LESS on cookware with non-stick interiors

69

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A 8-pc. cast aluminum set with SilverStone' interiors, Reg. sep. prices total $146.96 in 1983 Fall General Catalog.

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B. 7-pc aluminum cookware set with SilverStone' interiors Separate prices in April, 1983 L" Catalog total $60.96

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Cooker-fryer with lift-out basket reg. $29.99

11 -inch frypan with stick-resistant SilverStone interior, reg. $34.99

Slow cooker with auto-shift control, reg. $29.99

12-speed hand mixer with wall rack, reg. $29.99

Self-cleaning steam/dry iron, reg. $29.99

Ask about Sears credit plans

Housewares not sold In Ashland, Shelby. Williamson

Set includes grill, muffin pan, cake ring. Reg. sep prices total$29.97.ThruOec31.

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$59.99* 50-pc St Jene or St Clair stainless steel flatware. SF9.99* 7-pc cutlery set with oak block; sharpening steel $59.99* 4-pc ceramic canister set with floral pattern Based on reg. price in 83 Fall General Catalog While quantities last

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Soviet Union: Rights' Haven

By STEVEN R. REED MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union ignored President Reagans criticism of its human rights record Saturday and proclaimed itself a citadel of individual freedom.

"Power here belongs to the people." the official Communist Party newspaper Pravda told its readers in a front-page article commemorating International Human Rights Day.

The newspaper listed the foremost rights enjoyed by Soviet citizens as "the right to labor, rest, housing, education, medical treatment, material support in old age, cultural benefits, and also political rights - freedom of speech, the

press, conscience, assembly and the right to elect and be elected.

The article capped a week-long propaganda build-up contrasting the "profound democracy guaranteed in the .S.S.R. against U.S. exploitation and abuse of citizens, particularly women, workers and racial minorities.

"Anyone who thinks the Soviet Union suffers through Human Rights Day in embarrased silence doesnt understnd the nature of this regime, said a Western analyst. This is part of the same Kremlin mentality that blamed the Uited States for forcing it to shoot down the Korean airliner and for

walking out of the Geneva arms talks.

Pravda said U.S. imperialism is the leading suppressor of human rights and freedom, and accused the R^gan administration of raising terrorism to the level of official

^Chfef among U.S. abuses overseas are the invasion of Grenada, acts of undeclared war against Nicaragua and El Salvadors leftist rebels, subversion against Cuba. Angola and Afghanistan and intervention in Lebanon. Pravda said. The press also devoted extensive space to the plight ot

individuals in the Soviet Union and United States.    ^

Reagan Given Mixed Marks

W.ASHINGTON (UPII -President Reagan got a mixed report card Saturday from 11 leading conservatives asked to grade the chief executive and his administration after almost three year in the White House.

The assessments, collected for the Heritage Foundation's magazine. Policy Review. ranged from Phyllis Schlafly's. "You will not see me criticizing Ronald Reagan" to Paul Weyrich's. "The radical surgery that was required in Washington was not performed......

Nearly every one of the conservatives asked for brief commentaries had something good to say about Reagan or his record. But only one, William Rusher, faiied to come up with something that the president did "or' not do that displeased them,

Schlafly, a leader in the battle against the Equal Rights Amendment, said criticizing Reagan "is an easy way for conservatives to get on the national media, but 1 think that's a mistake "

She praised Reagan as "a wonderlul man with all the right instincts" and said "he was fitie on the moral issues, " had "licked infla

tion" and "Stood absolutely firm on the air controllers strike.

But she added that Reagans main problem "is that he is not a tough enough administrator" and declared. Social Security was mismanaged at the White House. Reagan shouldnt have talked about the subject at all."

Weyrich, head of the Comnrii'ttee for Survival of a Free Congress, started his comments in a critical vein.

He complained that Reagan's promise to keep hands oft entitlement programs was "one of the few pledges he has kept absolutely." and ^J|uped Reagan "blew a hnitoric opportunity to shake up the leadership of the black community" by failing to appoint' conservative blacks to federal jobs.

But even Weyrich had a good word for Reagan's stress on tax cuts and defense. emphasizing that "militarily, we are decidedly better off than we were before the inauguration."

Rusher, publisher of National Review, said. 'Genuine conservatives are by and large overjoyed by Reagan and rightly so."

He said Reagan had suc

cessfully united social and economic conservatives, not permitted a single square inch of territory" to be gained bv the Communists, made the right choice in lowering taxes and done "the statesmanlike thing on Social Seciiritv."

Cal Thomas, a vice president of the Moral Majority, began with a searing comment: If we balance the budget and we still keep murdering a million and a half babies a year, theres no way we can say we are better off than we were four

years ago. He charged Reagan always says the right things to conservatives.

At the same time, Thomas praised Reagans record on economic and military policies.

A Reflector Review

'Charlie Brown' Full Of Spirit

Mavbe this afternoon at 3 o'clock a bigger audience than the young actors had Thursday 'night will show up to see the delights of "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown." in the second and final performance in the auditorium at North Pitt High School.

. To ,..Us credit, the_ cast performed to a third-full house with as much fervor as if It had had a standing-room only audience; for their part, the small audience gave the young players a consistently warm response from the moment the curtain opened.

In the title role of Charlie Brown. Monty Warren sparkles as the kid always put down by his comrades. He makes believable (some-

Come See and Hear A

LIVING, SINGING CHRISTMAS TREE

Composed of Members of FIRST PENTECOSTAL CHURCHS Sanctuary, Choir & Orchestra Presenting a CHRISTMAS CANTATA An Old Fashioned Christmas by Don Wyrtzen

SATURDAY    SUNDAY

DEC, 17, 7 PM DEC. 18,11AM

Tree stands 16V2 feet tall with 1800 Lights weighing 6500 lbs. including 50 people.

FIRST PENIECOSTAl HOIINESS CHUR

Brinkley Road at Plaza Drive Greenville, N.C.

times touching) the mood transitions from serious though off-the-wall philosophic rationalizations to controlled frustration in dealing with Snoopy to dismayed moments of good grief." Somehow. Warren physically resembles the stage image I've fostered of Charlie Brown more than any other actor Ive seen in several productions of this play.

Curtis Moore's zany, loose-limbed interpretation of Linus, the kid in love with his security blanket, turned out to be laugh-provoking riot in several instances -particularly in his brief dance scene in "My Blanket andMe."

Other students in lead roles - Sandy Braxton as that crabby young lady. Lucy; Peggy Jenkins as Snoopy, the dog with a wild imagination; Jarrett Wynne as Beethoven-fancier piano playing Schroeder; and Rose Beil as the sanest member of the ensemble. Peppermint Patty, all gave good account cfthcmsclvei:.

Students appearing as extras are Linda Davis, Ronnie Perkins, Mike Colville, Jesse Purvis, Angela Mercer, Wanda Hines, Danita Kennedy, and Virginia Hardy.

From time to time the youthful actors fell prey to two common shortcomings often present in high school play productions - rushing the flow of words and occasionally turning away from the audience when speaking their lines. Sometimes too they failed to wait until laughter died down to carry on.

These shortcomings do not. however, essentially mar the overall enjoyment of what the North Pitt drama students have achieved in this now classic philosophically oriented comedy based on Charles Schultzs famed comic strip. "Peanuts. with music and lyrics by Clark Gesner.

The simplified stage set works to advantage - con

veying a ,visual image much like the spartan visual quality of the comic strip. Sgt. John Relford and Linda Davis provided fine lighting.

In his first directorial effort, teacher Danny Dial reveals a sure grasp of working with young actors, and his added role as accompanist on the piano is a remarkable accomplishment in successfully wearing two hats at once.

Anyone wanting to be reminded in a refreshing way that "people who eat peanut butter are lonely, or to be astonished to hear that "you can tell the age of a tree by its number of leaves need only to take in You're A Good Man. Charlie Brown" at North Pitt this afternoon. Those spirited young actors deserve a full audience.

JERRY RAYNOR

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October, 1932, Mathew Lewis (Ahoskie, N.C.) came to Pitt County to work. October 1933, Christine Keys (Norfolk, Va.) came, too, for the same reason. One month later, November, 1933, these two young people,^ total strangers in a foreign land, (ages 22 and 19 respectively) married and settled down to make Greenville their permanent home.

The years have come and the years have gone. Some were very good while some were bad by certain standards. But. age, praise God. has taught us that God is a good God even in bad times.

Our children have grown up, moved away and have families of their own. But. thanks to a good God, they and their total families still love to come home, a place they call Home Sweet Home, a city and county they are all quite proud of and grow more proud of following each visit. Recently they happily surprised old Mom and Dad with a joyous Fiftieth (50) Anniversary Celebration! To all who wished us well we say "Thank You . Pitt County has been very, very good to us and good for us.

Now all twenty (20) of us, plus our many adopted children scattered over Gods universe in North Carolina. Virginia. Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey. Pennsylvania, District of Columbia. California, Florida, Virgin Isles, St. Thomas, Africa (Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, Malawi, Ghana, Sudan, Zimbabwe) Denmark, Europe, with deep and sincere gratitude in our hearts, think it is time for us to say to all of our friends.

Thanks. Pitt County

And May The Peace and Happiness Of Christmas Be Yours Today And Every Day Throughout The Coming Years.

i PEANUT BUHER

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Custom

Crafts

Doll Cradles Boqk Cases Spice Cabinets

Computer Furniture

Many Other Items

746-4208 Or 746-4440

Custom Items '

Of Your ChoiceChristmas At The N. C. Zoo

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C. Sunday. December n. 1983 C-11

ASHEBORO-"Christmas at the Zoo. a celebration of tropical sights and sounds combined with seasonal activities. will be presented at the North Carolina Zoological Park near Asheboro beginning Saturday and continuing through December,

During this celebration, guides will lead visitors

through the glass-domed aviary, with tours every 20 minutes between 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. In the zoo plaza, a tree with edible ornaments (for birds) will be in place, and members of 13 Randolph County garden clubs will decorate a towering cedar from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the celebration's opening day, Saturdav.

HELP A CHILD!

^\\m Cldi Or GREENVILLE . ANNUAL .

%MAS TRFf

TREE

At Nichols

Discount City 264 ByPoss

Trees Have Just Arrived Priced To Fit All Budgets

Hurry For Best Selection ALL PROCEEDS GOTO YOUTH WORK

9 A.M. - 9:30 P.M. Monday - Saturaay. 12-6 P.M. Sunday

1st Annual Trade-In On Nursing Shoes

Regardless of brand or condition.

Now worth $5 towards any new pair of shoes during trade-in time.

Dec. 7 thru 17

Any shoes in good . condition will be donated to charity.

J.A/S Uniforms

1208 West 6th St.

The perfect Christmas gift for two...

Our collection of Sasaki fluted champagne glasses in

gift sets.

CHRISTIES

656 Arlington Boulevard 756-0949 'Located next to Kitchen Cupboard"_

Hours; 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.

Monday thru Saturday til Christmas

QiJe 'he QVaiiii^g Just ^on ^ou QJuh Qmt Qit 3deas Coondimted Outit9 ^on ^ou/t ^apfiy do^idays.

JL.

C. mBBER WRBES

EVANS MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE

In the animal habitats, from 1:30 p.m. until 3:30 p.m. Dec. 21, carols will be sung by students from Trinity High and Cadette Troop 106, along with other church, school and Scout troops.

Other highlights of the two-week celebration will include; a wildlife film in the Zoo Society conference room at 1:30 p.m. and at 2 p.m. on Dec. 26; young artists day. Dec. 27 at 1:30 p.m.; puppet shows at 1:30 p.m. and 2 p.m. qn Dec. 28; face painting by the High Point Clown Club at 1-30pm Dec.29.andshow

by a ventriloqist at 1:30 p m. Dec. 30. That date is also Grandparents Day. with grandparents and their grandchildren admitted free when they visit the zoo together.

Visitors will be admitted without charge Dec. 23-26. On other days admission is $3 for adults. $1 for childreri ages 2-15 and for senior citizens. Handicapped persons are not charged an admission fee.

For more information on the Christmas program at the zoo. call 879-5606.

Give Her The Best Give Her Bolero Importeid From France At

LorVs

Carolina East Centre 756-6846

Book News

FROM SHEPPARD MEMORlAl, LIBRARY

ByHANSYJO.NES    ~

Two recent additions to the juvenile collection will be warmly welcomed by adults and the children they love.

( "Great Parties for Young Children" is full of good party ideas for children in the two-to-nine age group. Every parent facing a one-digit birth or other celebration will find this book fresh, imaginative, and enormously helpful. If offers detailed ^ plans for a dozen theme parties, brief suggestions for many more, a section on holiday parties, chapters on games and activities, and recipes and directions for wonderful cakes and all kinds of colorful, child-oriented food and drinks.

Also included are general tips on staging children's parties, and an unusual and perceptive section on giving successful parties for children who have mental and/or physical handicaps. The two young mothers who are the authors of the book emphasize having the party boy or girl shareactively in the preparations. What better way to heighten anticipation -and enjoyment.

Simple directions are given for games and activities as well as for economical home-made decorations and accessories that help make each party unique. It a!! adds up to a book that will help parents transform a single morning or afternoon into a memory that a child will treasure - and have fun doing it. '    '    ,

Another book calculated to warm the hearts of both child and adult is the delightful new "Random House Book of Poetry for Children." This is a treasure chest of poems, old and liew, selected by Jack Prelutsky and illustrated by Arnold Lobel - an unbeatable team. In one sumptous. inviting volume it offers 572 fine, funny, illuminating poems for children.

Arranged in 14 thematic sections. this\olume includes poems for every occasion throughout the year, every stage of growing up. every childhood passion or complaint, there are quiet nature poems and deliciously scary Halloween poems; poems full of mystery and poems to make you laugh outloud. Poetry should be a part of every childs life. This is the book to begin with:

The Wishing Well Christmas Gift Guide

We Have Everything You Need For Sharing Your Holidays. American Greetings Christmas Cards And Notes,

Gift Wrap And Ribbon,

Holiday Plates & Napkins    ^

Tree Ornaments, Decorations And Candles, 1984 Calendars.

Silk Christmas Candle Rings And Center Pieces Brass Ware - Music Boxes Holly Hobbie Figurines-Thimbles Crystal Bellj-Garfield Mugs Plus A Wide Assortment Of Gifts. So If Youre Looking For A Beautiful Christmas, Come To Our Store Today

nUmM

AMERIO\N'IWGREETINr

.hi lhal sfxiidl [XT^ofi Greenville Square Shopping Center-756-0063

Pinewood Craft & Furniture Co.

Sierra Club Meets Monday

The monthly meeting for December of the Cypress Group of the Sierra Club will be held at 8 p.m. Monday at the First Presbyterian Church, 14th and Elm Streets.

At this meeting, the focus will be on acidic rainfall in North Carolina. Based on reports available, the average rainfall in North Carolina has a pH factor of 4,4, almost 16 times as acidic as normal rain. Some rainfalls measured in Raleigh have been analyzed as having 220 times the acidic factor that normal rainfall has.

Guest speaker will be Dr. Ann Barluska of the Acid KDeposition Project of the School of Forestry, North Carolina State University, Raleigh.

Also at the December meeting, the controversial Canadian film, "Acid Rain: Requiem or Recovery." will be shown. The film has been labeled as propaganda by the U.S. government.

Anyone interested in these or other environmental topics are invited to attend the meetings of the Sierra Club.

Presents

A BARGAIN in time for Christmas

30%

off ,

With storage on one or both sides. Super Sturdy!

Locally Hand Made

Cabbage Patch Like Dolls

Hand Made

RAGGEDY ANN & ANDY DOLLS

Open till 8:00 p.m. on Friday 200 E. Greenville Blvd. Next door to Greenville TV and Appliance

Receives Arts Award

Lois Ann Staton of Greenville, currently executive director of the Haywood County Arts Council, is a recent recipient of an arts and humanities award given by the Governors Council on the Arts and Humanities.

With the $900 award, she attended a two-week "Managing the Arts" course held on the campus of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

The council is supported by businesses who are members of the council. The scholarships were awarded for the first time this year.

& $QzeSo

614 Arlington Blvd.

Open Daily 10 AM to 9 PM Phone 756-0771

Best Sellers

fICTION

1. Pet Sematary, Stephen King

2. Poland, James Michener

3. "Moreta," Anne McCaffrey

4. "The Saga of Baby Divine," Bette Midler

5. "Changes," Danielle Steel

6. "Who Killed the Robins Family? Thomas Chastain

NON-FICTION

1. "Motherhood, Erma Bombeck

2. "The Best of James Herriot

3. In Search of Excellence, Peters & Waterman

4. Megatrends, John Naisbitt

5. "Tough Times Never Last, but Tough People Do, Robert H. Schuller

6. "On Wings of Eagles," KenFollett

Lots of unique hand made gifts to choose from.

Q\3-n-6ERTSo/v

The ORIGINAL

Christmas Tree

In

China

Table Accessories Paper Goods Glassware ...and much more





f^^cordACAlL'

Record aCalL

2(1-12)





m

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, Decembef 11.1983    A-11

Adopt-A-Pet I Latest Truce In Lebanon Holding

   ^    9

''y"m\ '-y    .....-i'^''''^''^ yW'W'piii

The Adopt a Pets of the Week are a one-year-old spayed female German shepherd-Welsh corgi-mixed dog and a black male neutered male cat. 758-2511.

Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following:

Two 7-week-old part-border collie puppies with shots. 752-2596.

Three 4-month-old black kittens. 755-8234.

Four 6-week-old golden retriever-doberman pinscher puppies, wormed and with shots. 753-3685.

An 8-month-old Australian shepherd thats deaf, white with black and gray markings. Knows some sign language. A 2-year-old spayed female miniature collie, black and white, with shots. Both need fenced yards. 752-9922.

A spayed female white cat and a spayed female orange cat, both with shots; two spayed female tri-colored cats; a spayed black cat. Humane Society, 756-1268.

A full-blooded male poodle, inside dog, has shots, good with children. 757-1602.

A spayed female brown mixed German shepherd, small in size; a male Irish setter; a female Benji dog, standard-sized; a blond mixed terrier, small with short hair, housetrained; a 4-month-old male black and white, housetrained; a 4-month-_o!d female blaek and white puppy with shots; a 4-montk-o!d -mixed Lab with shots; a 6-week-old tri-colored puppy that will ibe medium-sized dogs, with shots; a male black and brown .hound with shots. Humane Society, 756-1268.

: ^ A femaJe white housecAt wilhjhgts.J58-M^

Three 7-week-oid black kittens756-7521.

Two 7-week-old kittens. 746-2328.

,' Lost in County Pound area - a 3-month-old female black 'Lab puppy, white on paws and chest. 758-5001 or 758-4272.

Lost - a 4-month-oId sable male collie. 756-3351.

Lost on Mumford Road - a 5-month-old male gray kitten with white chest wearing white flea collar. 752-6708.

Found in Jefferson Drive area - a male orange tabby with white on chest and feet - 758-2571.

. Found in Lynndale area - a male blacck and silver German shepherd - may be mixed with huskey. Humane Sociuety. 756-1268.

Found on Charles Boulevard a male mixed brown and black German shepherd. 752-3817.

Lost near Stancii Drive Whiie cat witb white colla^^^ 758-5467.    

Found in Nichols parking lot - standard poodle. Call and <iescribe. 752-1124,

To place an animal for free adoption through this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Elizabeth Savage. 756-4867; Barbara Haddock. 752-9922; Bobbie Parsons. 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; Melinda Brown. 752-1352: Cathv Ketron, 746-2468 (Ayden); or Carol Tver. 752-6166.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The nations latest cease-fire appeared to be holding Saturday following minor skirmishing that left two civilians wounded. The PLO claimed new Israeli gunboat attacks on its positions in Tripoli, but the Israeli command denied it.

President Reagan promised in Washington that the United States will redouble our diplomatic effort to achieve peace in Lebanon and Secretary of State George Shultz, speaking in Tunisia, said he had encountered strong Arab criticism of a new U.S.-Israel defense agreement.

In southern Lebanon, an Israeli soldier was killed by a roadside bomb near the port city of Sidon, the Israeli military command in Tel Aviv announced.

It said the 19-year-old soldicL was killed, when his patrol passed by the ambush site on the southern approach to Sidon. The patrolss members opened fire and then searched the area, the command said. It did not report any detentions.

The guns fell silent in most areas of Lebanon after a Syrian-sponsored truce took effect Friday evening. Lebanons army and Druse militiamen traded artillery fire briefly Saturday in Souk el-Gharb and Kabr Chmoun southeast of the U.S. Marine base at Beirut airport.

Beirut radio reported that two civilians were wounded by sniper fire in the Beirut

suburbs where Shiite Mcslem militiamen face army troops and the right-wing Christian Phalange militia.

In the northern port city of Tripoli, meanwhile, the Palestine Liberation Organization claimed that its positions came under fire from Israeli gunboats for the second time in two days.

A PLO statement said the port area was hit with rockets and heavy machine-gun fire in two attacks, from io;40 p.m. Friday until Just after midnight and again at 3 a.m. Saturday.

The Israeli command in Tel Aviv denied any attack had taken place and the PLO claim could not be verified through any other source.

In his weekly radio broadcast. Reagan said the United States has "acted with great restraint" in Lebanon "despite repeated provocations and murderous attacks. But he said the United States would do whatever necessary to protect its troops.

Tunis after meetings with President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia and Chedli Klibi, secretary-general of the

Arab League, and then left for Morocco.

I heard many critical comments about the U.S.

relationship with Israel. Shutz said.

But he added. I think is is important to say in an Arab

capital that the United States had, does have and will have a strong relationship with Israel."

Eight U.S. Marines and one U.S. Navy pilot perished in the past week during air and land battles involving the American forces in Lebanon. The death toll of U.S. servicemen in Lebanon reached 255.

Reagan promised to. redouble diplomatic efforts "to promote reconciliation and achieve withdrawal of all foreign forces.

Shultz spoke to reporters in

Araentina Ends Military Regime

Marines' Bodies Returned To U.S.

BUENOS AIRES. Argentina (AP) - Vowing to "establish democracy once and for all in Argentina." Raul Alfonsin was inaugurated as president Saturday in festive ceremonies that ended nearly eight years of military dictatorship.

"There are many problems that cannot be solved immediately." Alfonsin said in his inaugural address, "but puDiic immorahiy ends today. We are goiiig to guvci with decency.

' Alfonsin, the 56-year-old leader of the Radical Civic Union, swore before a joint session of Congress to respect the national constitution and ensure that it is respected" in this South American nation of 28 million people.

Ten heads of government and dozens of high-level delegations from around the world, including an American representation headed by Vice President George Bush, attended the emotional ceremonies in the copper-domed Congress building. The building was shuttered in March 1976 when the military ousted and imprisoned former President Isabel Peron.

Mrs. Peron. 52. widow of three-time president Gen. Juan Peron. returned from two years self-exile in Spain for the inauguration - at Alfonsins invititaion. Mrs, Peron succeeded her husband in office upon his death in 1974,

She joined former President Arturo Frondizi. the other living Argentine leader, in raising the blue and white national flag in the Congress chamber before Alfonsin took the oath.

Victor Martinez was sworn in as vice-president for Alfonsins six-year term.

Tens of thousands of Argentines, many wearing the Radicals' white berets, listened under sunny, late-spring skies to Alfonsins hour-long inaugural address through loudspeakers erected in the plaza outside.

He noted the nations pressing economic problems, which include 12 percent unemployment. 400 percent annual inflation and $40 billion foreign debt, and pledged to cut public spending and stimulate exports and savings. The nations mountainous debt "will be studied to determine what part of it is legitimate.

DOVER AIR FORCE BASE. Del. (AP) - For the 14th time since Octobers terrorist bombing of Marine Corps headquarters in Lebanon, funeral services were held Saturday for soldiers slain in combat abroad.

[\ IVIOI lltv    U

stood at attention in a stark, white hangar at the base, while the Marine band played hymns and a Navy Chaplain gave words of comfort to sobbing family members and friends.

The nine flag-draped coffins contained the bodies of Navy Lt. Mark Lange, 26, of Fraser, Mich. - a pilot shot down last Sunday during an air attack on Syrian positions in Lebanon - and those of eight Marines killed during a bombardment on their positions in Beirut later that day.

Navy Rear Adm. David L. Harlow called the fallen servicemen "todays patriots, todays heroes who died serving their country for peace in the world.

Marine Maj. Gen. Thomas R. Morgan added; These brave men served with selfless dedication... They have made the supreme sacrifice.

The nine bodies arrived at the base - which houses the

largest mortuary on the East Coast -- late Friday and will be transferred to the servicemens home towns with a Marine escort.

The Marines headquarters in Beirut were the target of a terrorist bombing attack Oct. 23 which killed 240 U.S. servicemen Of those 237 were brought to the base to be honored in ceremonies, along with 14 serv'icemen killed in the U.S.-led invasion of Grenada.

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Southern Pawn Shop, InCi

Remember for extra Christmas CA$H, Southern Pawn is the answer.

Southern Pawn Shop, Inc.

V.

Aik about kUiii. MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED: Zl Cidit Cird MiiUiCird VISA Americin Expn Cirti Blanch* Dinen Club llluitntloni enlarged.

t ii I iiliVli li li HMi III iii iilii liLiii tfiBrilLl*"!! T 'm





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When you need money, cash in on the items that are laying around the house--rtems that you no longer use

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CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personals..................W2

InMemoriam..............003

Card Of Thanks.............005

Special Notices.............007

Travel & Tours.............009

Automotive................010

Child Care..................040

Day Nursery...............041

Health Care................043

Employment...............050

For Sale....................060

Instruction.................080

Lost And Found  ...........082

Loans And Mortgages 085

Business Services    091

Opportunity    093

Professional................095

Real Estate................100

Appraisals.................'01

Rentals....................'20

WANTED

Help Wanted...............051

Work Wanted...............059

Wanted....................'^0

Roommate Wanted.........142

Wanted To Buy ......    ...    '44

Wanted To Lease...........'46

Wanted To Rent............148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent . 121

Business Rentals...........'2?

Campers For Rent    124

Condominiums tor Rent    125

Farms For Lease    107

Houses For Rent............127

Lots For Rent..............129

Merchandise Rentals    131

Mobile Homes For Rent    133

Office Space For Rent ...... 135

Resort Property For Rent.    137

Rooms For Rent............138

SALE

Autos tor Sale...........Oil    029

Bicycles tor Sale, .v . 030

Boats tor Sale..............032

Campers tor Sale...........034

Cycles tor Sale   ..... >036

Trucks tor Sale.............039

Pets........................046

Antiques...................061

Auctions...................062

Building Supplies...........063

Fuel, Wood, Coal...........064

Farm Equipment...........065

Garage Yard Sales    067

Heavy Equipment    068

Household Goods .......,069

Insurance..................071

Livestock..................072

Misceiianeos:    074

Mobile Homes tor Sale    075

Mobile Home Insurance . . . . 076

Musical Instruments.......077

Sporting Goods  ,.. , r.. 078

Commercial Property    102

Condominiums tor Sale 104

Farms tor Sale.............106

Houses for Sale.............109

Investment Property    111

Land For Sale .. ..........113

Lots For Sale. . ........^    .115

Resort Property for Sale IT

Sometimes the simplest things work the best like a simple, little ad in classified For a simple solution to your selling problem, try classified.

~tiftMtirttssiftir

PIm)m7S2-8166

PUBLIC NOTICES *

PUBLIC NOTICES

FILE NO. 83SP430

FILM NO.

INTHEGENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE: Foreclosure of Deed of Trust Executed by Tommie L. Little Builders, Inc., dated August 26, 1980, and of record in Book H-49, page 28, Pitt County Public Regis fry, by Edward J. Harper; Ih Substituted Trustee (by instrument or record in Book I 52, page 231, Pitt County Public Registry)

NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND'UNDERDEEDOF TRUST Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that certain deed of trust dated August 26, 1980, executed by Tommie. I Little Builders, Inc., and duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, in Book H 49, page 28, In which J. Larkin Little was named Trustee (Edward J. Harper II.) having been duly substituted as successor trustee by instrument recorded in Book I 52, page 231, Pitt County Registry), default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured, and pursuant to the demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured thereby, and after notice and hearing and order authorizing foreclosure to proceed by the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County dated November 28, 1983, and done in accordance with Section 45 21.16 of fhe General Statutes of North Carolina, the undersigned Substituted Trustee-wili, at 12.00 Nooh on December 20, 1983, at the front door of the Pitt County Courthouse, offer for sale to fhe highest bidder for cash, at public auction, that certain real property and the improvements iotfftwi ttieteon described o3 lying and being in Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as tollows:

Being all of Lot 6, in Block "B" in that certain Subdivision in or near the City of Greenville, Winterville Township, Pitt County, North Caro lina, known as "West Haven" Section III, according to map of

Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellan-j ecus For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per| Ad With Sale Value Of $200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads I Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancella-| tion.

Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

lassified AdsI 752-6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

30 X 60 OESK

*179

uiiiMiiiiiHitEnmnco.

Corner of Pitt & Green St.

people read classified

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C I. Lupton Co.

MEDICAL CLERICAL POSITION

Immediate need for skilled clerical person with strong background in health related disciplines (LPN preferred). Leading area manufacturing industry has opening for candidate who will assist in workers compensation claims, medical insurance claims, first aid, plant safety, and other personnel administrative systems. Strong typing and administrative skills required.

Please send resume to:

MEDICAL CLERICAL POSITION

P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27835

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

Eastern North Carolina Textile Company Needs

MANAGEMENT

TRAINEE

Must be college graduate. Send resume to: PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

2500 Airport Road Kinston, NC 28501

An Equal Opportunity Employer

IHItWIIK'SSPICIAL

1977 Olds Cutlass 2 door Coupe

*99

per month

Selling price ot $2100.00, S5S0 Down payment. Cash or Trade with approved credit, 18 payments at $99.52, APR 17%, Lite insurance Included. Total amount financed $1571.50, Total note due $1791.36, Plus NC Sales Tax and License.

Carolina East Sales

264 Bypass S Hooker Road    758-5860 Owned and Operated by

Qreanvllla N.C.    Dellas Tripp t Rickie Moore

FITNESSlPROiiilAM SPECIALIST

Responsible for coordinating a Fitness/Health program which includes fitness evaluations and exercise prescriptions. Job also entails developing, Implementing and supervising fitness and recreation programs. Background in fitness/health is a requirement.

This opportunity is located in North Carolina within a large fitness center. Candidates must send a letter of application and resma to: Fitness/Program Specialist, P.O. Box 17285, North Hills Station, Raleigh, N.C. 27619.

same which duly appears of rec^d In AAap Book 25, page 155, Pitt County Registry.

The improvements on said pro perty are included In the sale. Said sate Witt be make sobiet=4o^ttad valorem taxes and any outstanding governmental assessments, builo-ing restrictions and easements of record.

The last and highest bidder at the sale will be required to make a cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the first one thousand dollars of the bid price and five percent (5%) of the balance of the bid price at said sale.

This the twenty-ninth day of November, )983.

Edward J. Harper, II Substituted Trustee Everett 8. Cheatham Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 1220

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Phone: (919) 758 4257 December 11,18,1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Mary C. Moore late Of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before May 21, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted fo said estate please make immediate payment.

This 16fh day of November, 1983. . Alice Moore Hudson 1606Oaklawn Avenue Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Mary C. Moore, deceased. November 20, 27, December 4, 11, 1983

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOTICE

Having qualified at Executrix of the estate of Charlie Thomas Wells late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims againtt the^ estate- of taio deceased fo present them fo the undersigned Executrix on or before June 4, 1984 or fhis notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate ment.

1st day of December, 1983. Maggie L. Wells P.O Box 114 Grimesland, N.C. 27837 Executrix of the estate of Charlie Thomas Wells, deceased.

December 4,11,18, 25,1983

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY -

FREEI stop In and register at Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for tree gitt to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary.

Oil Autos For Sale

_ 4.

BEFORE YO SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar.

MANAGEMENT

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

I, BOBBY LEE STAINBACK JR.,

will no longer be responsiblefor any cfebts contracted by anyone other

than myself._

OPEN HOUSE for Parents without Partners. Sunday, December 11, 3 5 P.M. St. Peter's Catholic Church, Greenville

TAX DEDUCTIONS! Are you

making year end income tax plans? If so, remember the Pitt Memorial Hospital Foundation and Gifts Fund. Contributions are tax de ductable. For information call

757 4869__

Wl PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.

INSURANCE POINTS

OUR RATES MAY SAVE YOU MONEY! Call us before you buy MID-ATLANTIC INSURANCE, INC. 756 7723.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MORTGAGE

LOAN

PROCESSOR

Immediate opportunity tor mature, well-groomed person in the Mortgage Loan Ottice.

Must be able to handle a wide range ot people with diplomacy and confidential material with discretion. Accurate typing, good mathemetical and telephone skills required. Prior FHA/VA, Conventlonel Loan processing experience preferred.

Competitive salary and benefits. For further information,

please call:-------   

Mrs. Tyson (919) 752-0820 Greenville, N.C.

Greenville, N.C.

An Equal Opportunity mplover M/f

PRIME

LOCATION

200 ARLINGTON BLVD.

1236 SQ. FT. FOR LEASE

BUSINESS-PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE

756-6295

Planters; Bank

PRODUCT ENGINEER/ DESIGNER

New position with a well established Eastern North Carolina industry. y/e're looking for a Product Engineer/Designer for our Energy Division.

this individual must have at least 3 years manufacturing experience as well as design experience in medium steel fabrication industries. A BSME or equivalent degree desired, combustion experience a definite plus.

Send resume and salary requirements to:

PRODUCT ENGINEER

P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N. C. 27835

HELP WATlD!

RNs & LPNs FULLTIME. Salary commensurable with experience. CalL94'9570 for further information. An equal opportunity employer.

INSURANCE

MANAGER

IMMEDIATE OPENING!

If you are an ambitious individual with a successful record in sales, small loans, banking and insurance, you can earn a salary and commission range of up to $30,000 your first year as a manager with an AUTOMOTIVE DEALERSHIP in the GREENVILLE AREA. Prefer a minimum of 2 years college and related sales management experience.

to

Duties will include:

Selling dealer finance & insurance package Making recommendations to management regarding finance & insurance

Developing good dealership public relations

Local interviews will be conducted. Excellent benefits package, company car, with exceptional career growth potential. Please send resume in confidence to:

P.O. Box 13006 Norfolk, VA 23506-0666

An Equal Opportunity Empioyar M/F

IF

We are in need of several salespeople for a local, well established firm. We offer excellent company benefits, including Free hospitalization and life insurance. No overnight travel involved.

For an appointment. Call:

Carolina Moder Homes

758-3171

If you can be trained!

If you have a desire for sales!

If you would like a salary while you train! If you would like all fringe benefits!

If you would like a paid vacation!

If you can take supervision!

If you dont mind work!

We would like to talk to you!

Please apply to East Carolina Lincoln-Mercury-GMC bet ween the hours of 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM.

LINCOLN

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO IXPERIENCi NECESSARY

We will teach you...

Do you have a positive mental attitude Do you desire to be successful Are you able to follow directions explicitly Do you desire to earn $2000 to $2500 per month Iff Be....

Yo Ow H fo YmmtmH f0 Siv It A Try.

Apply in person only.

Absolutely no phone calls.

See Leland Tucker

HASTJJ^C

.rpORD <^iU

%niiinw> I

tlvrt t (n A A

tenth SUMI 284 By Pxs 758-0114 G-eenv,lie n C 27834

EAST

CAROLINA

West End Circle    Greenville.    N.C.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

756-4267

GET OUR SWEET DEAL ON A HONEY OF A CAR!

1984 Plymouth Colt 3 door Hatchback

Own the Dollar Stretcher Thats Fun to Drive!

Joe Cullipher 1 Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot

3401 S. Memorial Dr.

T





0_2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday, December 11,1963

K\ I hr \-s<K iaiMi ^*rrs^

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Anderson's 21 Leads Lady Bucs By JMU

Anita Anderson pumped in 21 points and hauled down 14 rebounds as the Lady Pirates of East Carolina Univeristy outscored the James Madison Dukes 37-19 in the second half to take a 57-47 ECAC-South victory Saturday at Minges Coliseum,

The Lady Pirates trailed by eight at intermission after leading early Tn"the gm, but took the lead for good at 41-40 with 6:46 left in the contest on a pair of free throws by

Aniiette Phillips. ECU held a 27-7 scoring edge over the final 12:11 of the game.

\Ve are really pleased with this win: it was'a tremendous comeback." ECU Coach Cathv Andruzzi said. "To be down by 12 with 16 minutes to go and win the game by 10 joints let our team know what it takes to win a basketball game - you've got to play hard for 40 minutes."

Anderson connected on 10 of 15 field goal attempts on the 3igh^ while Phillip^ held the

chipped In 10 points, and Michelle James grabbed 11 rebounds for JMU.

Madison came in averaging 48 rebounds a game. Andruzzi said, "and for us to outrebound them (37-35) was another plus.

"Delphine Mabry had a great game. We gave her another tough defensive assignment, and she responded well,"

The win evens the Lady Pirates at 3-3 overall, while 1^ in the ECAC-South. JMU also evened at 3-3. while 1-1 in the conference.

"Our conference win was very important," Andruzzi said "Since we only play them once, we needed the victorv."

hot hand for the Lady Pirates at the free throw line with six out of eight. Phillips also grabbed nine rebounds, while Sylvia Bragg added 11 points,

"Anita Anderson was outstanding inside We needed the instant points in the second half, and Anita responded for us. We cut down on our turnovers '16i and executed much better than in the UNC Charlotte game."

Sue Manelski led the Dukes with 22 points and eight rebounds. Betsv Witman

Witman

James

Franken

Gilligan

Manelski

Jackson

Flynn

Deren

James Madison Hi)

MP F(. FT Rb F \ P

37 5-8    IHI    7    0    1    1

,39 2-7    (HI    U    2    2    4

Meadows

Team

TiXals

(4 -1 (4 -i e^-14II (I 1 U 2 4

2U0 I9-7H 9-IU ;l.) 20 9 47

Phillips Anderson Hedges Bragg Mabr\ Rodriguez Nance Squirewell Team Totals James Madison Kasilarolina...

FasK arolina i.iit 44) 1-4 6-8 9 2 37 10-15 1-2 14 2

20(1 22-5

Turnovers JMl -18, ECl -16 Technical fouls none Officials Bill Franklin, Tom Splerno Attendance 200

Bertie Outlasts Jags; Farmville Girls Win

Turpin Buckets 25 In Wildcats' Win

LAWRENCE. Kan. (AP) -Melvin Turpin sc(m1 25 points while Jim Master gunned in 23, many of them on shots from long range Saturday night, and second-ranked Kentucky cruised past Kansas 72-50 in an intersectional college basketball game.

Kentucky, 3-0, took control at the outset and fashioned a 35-20 halftime lead over the Jayhawks, 3-2.

Kansas outscored the Wildcats 8-2 and reduced the deficit to 37-30 three minutes into the second half.

Turpin and Master then went to work. Turpin, a 6-foot-ll senior, was too much for the Jayhawks to handle inside along with teammate Sam Bowie, the 7-foot senior who is coming back after a two-year layoff caused by a leg injury.

Calvin Thompson, who had only four points in the first half, led the Jayhawks with 18.

Thomoson. a 6-fi sophomore.

took advantage of potM* ball handling by the Wildcats and

hit two quick jump shots to e second hall.

begin the seco

Kentucky Coach Joe B. Hall called a timeout after the lead had melted to seven points, and the Wildcats then regained control.

Kenny Walker worked inside for a layup, then Turpin and Master scored 10 of the Wildcats next 12 points and restored Kentuckys lead to 51-36.

SAADS

SHOE REPAIR Quality Shoe Raping

113QrandaAva.

73$-122S

NtOooiTp(MU|*VlMCttwtn

Hours

MMon.-Fri.

Sat. 8-3

'Parking In Front

m

Hr

M-

r.i-.liinJ-; : Ui-,

\1 . K',1 M.i4

' ihi.,'7j X.n I

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Mlllll M,

I'tI.ti:

. iLi.i ^ \ allMraix)'I't lit'l'.ui W.ili.i'hTH .\ltilnll7: UnuhlSi Thiiiii.i-

, KAR.MVILLE - Farmville Central and Bertie Senior battled to the wire Saturday^ night, but when the buzzer* soiided Bertie held a 38-3o lead to trim the Jaguars in high school basketball action.

The Lady Jags needed 14 points Irom Joy Deaden, n by Stephanie .Newton and 10 from Lisa Lang to defeat Bertie 55-48. Andrea Gillian scored 14 for Bertie, while Coretta Gillian added 11.

Stephen Hayes paced Bertie with 13 points, while Kent Hardy led the Jaguars with 19 DOints.

The Lady Jags improved their mark to 2-3 on the season with the wm.

Jawee score: Bertie :)8, Farmville Central 35

(lirlsliame

Bertie IIXI

A Gilliam 6 2-614. C Gillian 4:5-411. Hpllev 2 5-6 9, Kecia White 2 6-9 111. Howard 0 2-112. Ruffin 1 (Ml 2 Totals 15 IX-36 4S

Farmville t.5.5i Harl 12-2 4. Jovner 2 (Mi 4, Newlon 35-7 II Pearien 5 4:8 'l4. .Smith 3 2-4 8. Lang 3 4-5 lu. f)ixon 2 0-0 4. Petton 0 o-o o. WilliamsOO-OO Totals 1917-29.)5.

Bertie............................5 19 15    9-4X

Farmiille.....................7 14 1.5 19-.55

Rovstiame

Bertie 1361

Ryan 2 o-ii 4, S Hates 5 ;i-4 Li. CtKike 1 0-0 2. G Haves 1 1-2 3, Sanderlin 3 2-2 8. Rankins 30-06 Totals 156-9:t.

Farmville i35i Evans 4 12 9. Hardy 8 3-519. Move 01-2 1, Baker 2 o-o 4. \'ines 1 (Mi 2 Total's 15.5-9

Up For The Shot

East Carolina guard Delphine Mabry (14) goes up for a shot over James Madisons Mary Gilligan (3) Satur

day at Minges Coliseum. The Lady Pirates defeated the Dukes, 57-47. (Reflector photo by Tommy Forrest)

Bertie.............................14

Farmville.......................II

II

4-36

6-3.5

Got Mice?

Free Survey and Estimate

Offering Monthly Pest Services Control

Specials

i PEST

Call 758-5630\ control

CO.

. INC.

Fast-Safe Reasonable Service

Trinity Tops Praise, 63-34

Mn

Silt IIIVVFsl

KiiUslnnTI ,M M.ii". - Ti-s.i-. >.'

1 Ikl.ihiim.i 81* \n/iiii.iS' 7i. iikl.ih()ir..i.M 7.; M l.ipiji'i.l )luuchii.i :8). Ii.ill.i- B,i[iii>i 71 KK'('7ir, Tt'sa> sciulhcrii 7i)

S Ark,ins.i').7 K Ti-\a> B.ipli*.! 44 Tt\a^ Tech ::J IcptM'rdinc)>4 Tt\a^ Kl I.i-.iIm Indi.iii.i '.1

4 \lt W K.'T

HnUham Nniinu l"*i. Ft Marv

Now Mr\ii uti5.1( '1..\ I OreUnnSi 5.1 liiv)a48, PacilK l.ulheran III-

W VVa^hinulim

Manlord Iil7,( .il San DifUnOn iournanii-nl'>

.IVIt Inv it.ilionul Third Plat e

\ Illinois 73 Camptx'lltil

The Tigers of Trinity Christian School opened a l(i-point lead in the first quarter against Praise Academy from New Bern and rolled to a 63-34 victory Friday.

Jimmy Brown led Trinity with 12 points.

.lawee siorf. Trinity .53. Gramercy 23.'

\arsitv Bovs

Praise! 34

J Leake 1 0-1 2. Minks 6 2-5 14, Shelton 2 1-2 5, Kiggs o 2-4 2, Jones ] 1-2 3. Shelton 1 o-o 2,1), Leaks 3 o-:i 6. Totals 1 1 6-17 34.

Trinilv 1631 Wells 4 1-2 9. Harris 6 0-0 12, Brown 2 2-2 6. Powers 5 2-2 12. Peaden 3 o-5 6. Williams 0 11 *1. Mofian 0 o-o o. M Reynolds 3 4-7 lo. Everette 1 o-l 2. A Rey nolds 2 1-2 5 Totals 26 11-22 63.

Praise................. 4    13    X    9-34

Trinitv................It    16    14    19-63

on Fitness Equipment From Fitness Centers

JOGGING

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More effective, less strenuous than jogging, swimming, walking. Do it in comfort in your home. Legs detacj diameter.

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Purchase any dress shirt this week at Brody's for men and we will monogram it free of charge! What better logo to wear on your shirt than your initials! This mokes o great gift, or, why not treat yourself? Script or block style available. This week, no charge on monogromming at Brody's for men!

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DOORWAY GYM

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SUNBEAM HOME GYM EXERCISE BENCH

Deluxe incline bench with 5 positions. Great for developing both arms and legs.

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lull 12 daaplight iM*

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Pwlaet iv tha baglnrwrf Thia

waigM aat haa Intarlockin vinyl plataa, dumball bars id collara.

walgtit aat haa Intarlocking

59

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f

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Our Reg. 49.58

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20-pc. dinnerware set in service for 4 includes plates, salad plates, soup bowls, cups, saucers.58.97_

China service for 8 includes plates, soup bowls, cups, saucers, bread/butter dishes and 5 servers.





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by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

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I'AA SORRV/MR-BASLEV...

let me help you up





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983 .5

Help Wanted

NEEDED - EXPERIENCED Iron Apply at job site In Washington, N C Hiohwav 264. take first right after A& Church of God. Samet Construe-AAarketing job site. Apply to J & j steel Erectors Inc. on December 14

OPPOKIUNIIY. Ambitious man woman. Available for immediate Earnings opportunity S1S0S300 per week to start. Large national company.yCall 756-3861. ^ART-TIME administrative posi tion with the Mid East Commission Area Agency on Aging which serves Beaufort, Bertie, Hertford, Martin and Pitt Counties. Must be able to motivate older workers, "sell" the older worker to the business com munity, and provide supportive services to older workers. Perfect part time position for refired bus! ness persons. May workouf of home Send resume by December '5' 1^83 to; Mid East Commission Area Agency on Aging, PO Box 1787, Washington, NC 27889. Equal Opportunity Employer

PART TIME BOOKKEEPER

wanted Possibly revolving into full time work Stand Alone computer knowledge necessary. Wages depending upon experience. Call 756 4254 1 only

SPECIAL EDUCATION Teacher. Position available for energetic individual with a BS In mental retardation with an A certificate or BS in education with certification in mental retardation. Basic function of position is to provide a full array of educational services, both indirectly and directly to residence.

Competitive salary, excellent benefits. Please send resume to Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center Inc., PO Box 607, LaGrange, NC 28551. Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F,

I between 10 a m. and 3 p.m.

PERSON NEEDED in sales for unique Coatings Product. $25,000 per year potential. Must have good closing rates. Call 757 3355.

REAL ESTATE BROKERS. We

currently have an opening for a licensed real estate broker For more information or appointment call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 756 6810.

REAL ESTATE IN YOURFUTURE?

We currently have an opening for a sales associate. Must have NC real estate license You must be willing to attend our CENTURY 21 training program which consist of 40 hours of classroom instruction on the basics of listing, selling real estate, financing and working with the transferee Sales tools, referrals and in house training offered. Expected income the first year to be $15,000 plus For more informa fton call Ann Bass, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty or Madalyn McGuffIn, 756 5868

REGISTERED NURSE to serve as

Director of Nursing in 75 bed Intermediate Care facility. Im mediate opening. Call ad minislrator at (919) 747-2868.

REGISTERED NURSE to work in

Community Mental Health Out

Patient Center. Located 40 miles West of Greenville. Experience preferred, but not required. Pay range. $15.660 to $20,616. Excellent benefits, holidays, and regular hours Please send resume and NC Nursing License Number fo Nurse, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC. Equal Opportunity Employer.

RESTAURANr MANA GE R

Trainee National company needs success oriented people Super sal ary and benefits Outstanding op portunity for advancement wittv potential to own your business within 2 years Once in a lifetime opportunity Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel.

RESUMES WRITTEN to get results

Clus |ob search programs. Call tor rochure or appointment. Cushnian Writing Associates. 1 637 2889

RN NEEDED part time, 3 to 11 House Supervisor Competetive sal ary Call Britthaven of Kinston from 9am to 4 pm, 1 523 0082 for interview.

051

Help Wanted

SECRETARY. Mutt have good tec retarial tklllt Including tome word processing experience. A medldal background a plus. Excellent benefits. Call Judy for interview, 355-2020, Heritage Personnel Service.

SOCIAL WORKER. Howell's Child Care Center Inc. it seeking a highly motivated individual with either a BSW or BSP In social work and 2 years experience preferred In an ICF/MR facility. Please send resume to Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center Inc., PO Box 607, LaGrange, NC 28551. Equal Oppor tunlty Employer, M/F.

TELEPHONE SOLICITORS.

Immediate employment. $3.50 per hour starting pliis bonus. 20 hours week, Sunday-Thursday, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Call 757-1200 for appoinf menf 9a.m. to5p.m.

TEMPORARY OFFICE HELP. Typing skills a must. Send resume to Temporary, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.

TEXAS REFINERY Corporation offers plenty of money plus cash bonuses, fringe benefits ro mature individual in Greenville area. Regardless of ei^rlence, write J.D. Byers, Texas Refihei^ Corporation, Box 711, Fort Worth, Texas 76101.

TRAVEL AGENCY MANGER. No

longer growing? Supervisory ability? Opportunity with new agency with established agency facilities. Must have 2 years current travel agency experience. Washington, NC area. For growth manager position, send resume to Travel Agent In ternational, 8640 Seminole Boulevard, Seminole Florida, 33542 or call Lori Langenhahn, 1 800 237-1258.

TRUCKING Tractor Trailer drivers needed. 919-475-2119, In terstate Personnel Services, Inc.

WANTED experienced insurance agent. Please send resumes to Insurance Agent, PO Box 456, Ayden, NC 28513.

WEEKLY Pitt County publication needs full or part time salespersons. Excellent commission plan for the right individuals For interview call 757-0474.    i

SECRETARY

RECEPTIONIST

PART TIME 8:30 AM-1:30 PM

GREENVILLE

Enter the exciting world of securities investment banking as clerical support in our Greenville office. You ll work in a professional environment as you answer phones for branch office staff as well as organize and prioritize your daily work.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TVPES TREE SERVIC, Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding. Free estimates. J.P. Stancil, 752 6331. ANY TYPE REPAIR WORK. Carpentry, masonry, rooting. 35 years experience. Call James Harrington, 752 7765 after 6 p.m.

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs. Plumbing, carpentry, tie board, tops. State License. 746 2657 after 6.

GET YOUR CHRISTMAS painting done; interior and exterior, carpenter repair. Phone 758-5226.

HOME AND BUSINESS REPAIRS.

We can do it all. Additions built. Specialist in mobile home repairs, sundecks, porches, electrical work, plumbing, etc. Professional sign work. Repairs to furniture. Wood work is our glory, superb quality. We do not gamble our reputation. Reasonable too! Free estimates. Phone 752 7737 after 5 p.m.

HOUSE CLEANING. Price negotiable. Call Brenda ^t 746 6775 after4:30p.m.

LANDSCAPING DESIGN, mainte nance, winter and spring clean up. License 4361. 757 3462 after 6.

PAINTING INTERIOR and exteri or. Work guaranteed! References free esfimates. 13 years experience. 756 6873after 6 p.m.

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

ANTIQUE AUCTION SALE.

Sunday December 11, 2 p.m. Selling large load of antiques for Clarence Stangle from up stafe New York. 2 Bownfront china cabinets, round oak table, 4 oak chairs, 3 drawer stool cabinet, spindle back rocking chairs, old Kayo oil lamp, banquet lamp, figurine lamps, 8 day clocks, piano stool, old four string banjo, oak side board, very fancy mahog any what not stand with mirrored back, old dove tailed blanket chest, old wooden doll swing, oval pedestal table, large variety of depression glass. A tremendous amount of old picture frames and many, many other items too numerous to men tion. Sale to be held by George T Hawley, NCAL *76, Route 2, Box 898, Rocky Mount, NC 27801. 442 2867. Located 5 miles east of Rocky Mount just off US 64.

NINA'S ANTIQUES, 3 dealers Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday 1 til 5. 100 year old house. Farmville Highway 264.

OPENING GERI'S ANTIQUES.

103 North Lee Street and 1st Street West, Ayden. Hours Monday through Saturday, 12 to 5 p.m Phone 746 2607 Depression glass dolls, china, furniture, etc. Come do your Christmas shopping!

063 Building Supplies

CECO STEEL BUILDINGS by Riv

erside Iron Works, Inc. Phone 633 3121, New Bern, N.C. Since 1920.

064

Fuel, Wood, Goal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood sale. J.P. Stancil, 752 6331

ior

ALL HARDWOOD, $75 cord, $40 pickup load. 10 days only, I'l cords $100. Delivered and stacked 823 5407.

CRAFT HEATER, heats 2600 square feet, fits all standard fireplaces, excellent condition, $475 or best offer. 758 7889

If you have experience answering a busy console, are'skilled in typing and basic mathematics; possess

SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area A go getter attitude,

energy, creativity Earnings based        fLf.naced    

on performance Benefits and in centives! Promotions from within Call 756 671 1.

SALES. Established company has tmrrSzdiate need for mar, or woman with previous sales experience to call on new and established ac counts Car allowance and good benefits Call Judy, 355 2020, Heritage Personnel Service.

SALESCAREER

Will train aggressive person lor exceptional career opportunities. Substantial starting salary plus' incentive increases as earned Sales xperience helpful but ngt essential, rite or send resume to TH, PO ox 20006. Raleigh, NC 27619 EOE

BALES Need Sharp.

POSITION AVAILABLE

Aggressive, Highly Motivated Person Immediately /yale or Female. Excellent Pay ^ith Future Management Opportu aity Call For An Appointment at 0191 Crossland Mobile Homes.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE.

Silver Sprink Water Purification Company is now looking for quali fjed sales reps to market one of the fastest growing products to tight water pollution. Highly com missioned paid job Comapny will set up all appointments. For more intormatin and an interview, call 7665477 or write PO Box 1353, Greenville, NC 27834

WORD PROCESSOR - needed tor School of Medicine. Monday through Friday, 8 p.m. to 5 p m Requires high school graduate and f years experience in Medical transaction Word Processing ex perience desireable. State salary TAnge $10,164 to $14,340. Contact Personnel Department, East Carolina University, Greenville. NC 17834 (919) 757 6352. EOE/AA.

Word processor operator

r)eeded Excellent skills will land bis opportunity for you. IBM expe uence helpful. Call Ted, 758-0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel.

:s; poss iskills',' and desire a fast-paced work environ ment, send your resume to: Brian McKernon, Assistant Employment Manager, 707 East Main Street, Rithmond, VA 23219

Wheat

First Securities

An E qual Opportunity E mployer M- F / H

059

Work Wanted

Need part time work from now until the hotdaysT You'll find a position in Classified

PAINTING INSIDE or outside No jobs too small. Residential, apartments, and commercial. IS years experience. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. 758 7815.

PLASTER AND STUCCO REPAIR

best quality. Also new construction ;o. Call:

stucco.

(756 7297 anytime.

RADIO/TV REPAIR, all work guaranteed, will pickup and deliver. Also available for commission work. Call R W Smifh at Smith Electronics, 752 2768.

SPAIN'S MOBILE HOME Repair and Service, all types, free estimates, reasonable rates. 746 6575

WALLPAPERING AND Painting. 10 years experience. Local refer enees 758 7748

WHY PAY A fortune for wedding pictures? Call 756 4048 day or night.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FIREWOOD FOR SALE. $35 tor truckload. Call 757 1772 after 6 p.m

NUMBER ONE solid oak wood. $40 half cord; $80 cord. Delivered and Stackerl (jail before you buy. Deliv ered anytime 758 334

065 Farm Equipment

AIR COMPR6SSORS-V4 horse-power 10 gallon tank $179.95; 1 horsepower 14 gallon tank single cylinder $278;    1 horsepower 22

lion tank twin cylinder $385.49; -S rsepower 60 gallon tank twin cylinder $597.49; 5 horsepower 60 lallon tank two stage $1262.49. Air lne fittings and accessories in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752-3999.

CHRISTMAS GIFT IDEAS 25 piece Vi" drive socket set $14.49; 19" tool box with tray $11.49; 10" groove joint pliers $4.49. 14 piece combination wrench set $14.95. 16 ounce tublar handle claw hammer $3.49. 40 piece tap and die set $13.49. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752-3999.

COLD WEATHER SUPPLIESWe

carry a large line of cold weather supplies tor the farm, home or shop Including; space heaters by Gilson, heat tapes, pipe insulation and plastic for windows. For the livestock farmer we carry heat lamps and heat shades. Antifreeze by the

oa

Sui

upply, Greenville, NC, 752 3999.

POLYETHYLENE TARPS-Tough,

Lightweight and waterproof-16'x24' $27.95; 15'x20' $21.95, 12'x18' $15.95, 15'x30 $25.49, 8'xlO' $6.49; 10'x12' $9.49. 21" rubber straps 3 tor $1.39; 31" rubber straps 2 for $1.29. S Hooks 20 tor $1.19. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752 3999!

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory Mat tress 8, Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626.

COLONIAL LOVE SEAT sofa, used A-raonthSL. Taking loss, $275, CaU 756 5555, ext. 311.

FOR SALE: Sofa, chair. Excellent condition. $175. Call 355-2085 after 6 pm.

074

Miscellaneous

BRAND NEW GIRL'S COAT, size 6. Teal green corduroy with hood, acrylic pile lining. $45. 752 1015.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale. 4 models. Delivery setup. 919 763 9734

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.

CASH DISCOUNT of 20% when you shop downtown Steinbeck's for your men's clothing needs.

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques...anything of vallue.

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

074

Miscellaneous

FOR RENT: SANTA SUIT. Phone 752 5934.

FOR SALE : Saxophone, Guitar, and Intellivision with 6 cartridges. Call 756 4510.

FOR SALE: Refrigerator/freezer, 17.2 cubic foot with icemaker, avocado green, $300. Call 758 6321.

FUN GOCART. 5 horsepower. 2 seater, runs good, $250. Call 752 0001 after 7 p.m.

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Stripping, Repairing 8. Retinishing. (Formerly of East Carolina Voca tional Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway. 752 3509

GO CART, 2'z horsepower. Silver Streak, $195. Hardly used! Boys bicycle by Huffy (Thunder Road), $25. 756 0902 after 5 p m.

HOLIDAY PARTY CATERING and

Services. We can do as much or as little as you need in arranging from catering to facility and service assistance 757 1531.

CHEST FREEZER, 10 cubic feet, 1 year old. $200. Call 758 4553.

CHIPPENDALE SOFA tor sale. Excellent condition! Best offer. 758-8376 after 6 p.m. weekdays, anytime weekends

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING, Jarman Stables, 752 5237.

STABLES FOR RENT. 5.7 acres, 23 stalls, 2 rings. Four rail white fences. $350 per month. 758-0062 or 756 6146.

7 YEAR OLD MARE - Vj Arabian. $850. Phone 746 3837 or 746-4055.

073 Fruits and Vegetables

BROCCOLI, Cabbage. Ready now. You pick or we pick. Dew's Berry Patch. 756 7116,

074

Miscellaneous

ALL REFRIGERATORS, freezers, ranges, washers ai d dryers are reduced for quick sale. Rebuilt, like new. Call B J. Mills, 746-2446 at Black Jack.

ALL WEAIMtS I IRES for sale (G78xl4) tubeless, smooth running. Reduced to halt new price ($25 each) Call 752 4348.

APACHE WOODSTOVE, like nev/, make an offer. Call 756-2407.

ARGUS SLIDE PROJECTOR, plus 16 magazines, $50. Binoculars, 10x50 field five degrees, $40. Cannon QL Camera, $35. Call 756 6007.

BALDWIN PIANO. Like new. $850 Call 758 1255 before 2 p.m., or 746 4885 after 5p.m.

BARBIE DOLL collection, over 20 dolls in all, including Barbie, Ken, P J, Skipper, Skooter and Francie. $160 756 9070

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready fo go. Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5p.m.

OAK WOOD FOR SALE. Call 752 3379.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 or 758 5590

SEASONED OAK $45 for

Call 757 16J7.

SEASONED OAK firewood deli ered and stacked. Phone 758 6143

WOOD FOR SALE. Mixed, $35 Seasoned Oak, $45 Call 752 6286 anytime.

WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodstoves, chimney pipe and ac cessories. Squire Stoves. Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques, Winterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007

065 Farm Equipment

5088 INTERNATIONAL Harvester Tractor Dual wheels, radial tires, cab, air. Western interior, 3 remote valves, high flotation tires in front, 16.0x18 Rear, 20.8x38 758 4628.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

COMMANDO SWEATERS

FUHT JACKETS MAI L 2B. N-2B tfATHtR ROMBER B-1S SNORKELS MARKfRS EltLOS. A2 DECK PEA COATS RAINWEAR

Shops And Dishes

ARMY-NAVY STORE

1501 S Evans

BOY'S BMX BIKE customized Mongoose chromoly frame, tufwheel mags, etc. Excellent con dition.$175. 756 1277 after 6p.m.

ELECTROLUX SHAMPOOER, $65

Snoopy twin bedspread, 1 set of curtains, pillow sham, $50 set, new. Lavender long dress, size 9/10, worn once, $25. Little girl's long dress, size 8, worn once, J$ 15 , Call 756 7320or 756 2550anytime.

FACTORY OUTLET now open to the public. Buy direct and save. Rope hammocks, tote bags, athletic bags, cutting boards, and a variety of other great Christmas items manufactured by Hatteras, 1104 Clark Street.

FOLDING PING Pong table, $35 756 5389.

FOR RENT: Complete Santa Suit Tax deductible donation. Call 756 0500

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Snowden

Business Brokers

752-3575

WORK AVAILABLE

WE HAVE NEED for experienced bookkeepers, word processors, se nior typists and data entry opera tors. Work when you want, stay home when you want. Not a fee agency Call for appointment, fifease MANPOWER TEMPO PARY SERVICES, 757 3300.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE

2500 SO. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

SPECIAL

Safe

Model S-1 Special Price

M22

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S. Evans St.

752-2175

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

No Credit Check

With Red Carpet Lease*

TAKE YOUR PICK!

Based on 15,000 miles per year, 48 Month Lease with approved predit.

Through Special Arrangements with Ford Motor Company

Amrricd's 41 Used Car Company

H

ASTING

FORD

S

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass 758-0114 Ciiooiivillo. N C ;V834

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and retinishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756 9123.

A4 CONSAVARTE violin, $125 Snare drum with music stand, $75. 20" boys bike, $30 All good condi tion. Call 756 3782.

CORNING WARE

Excellent condition, days; nights 756 9864

30" range. Call 756 2750

COUNTRY WOOD CRAFTS.

Cabinets, folk arts, doll beds, etc. Check my quality and price before you buy: Customorders welcome. 756 6887

CRYSTAL by Fostoria, 25 pieces. $200. Phone 1 825 5781

^26.00 DELIVERS

DARE IV FIREPLACE insert Used 1 year. Super 8 Kodak camera and projector. 756 7912 after 5 p.m.

DIAMOND RING '2 carat White, flawless, $600.757 0634.

DINETTE SUIT, Solid maple, wood chairs. Call 753 3683.

horse blanket and all other

tack for horses. Western Boots to size 14 William Shoe Shop, 808 Dickinson Avenue 752 4121,

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON & BUYING TV's, Stereos.cameras, typewriters, gold & silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2464.

074

Miscellaneous

MATCHING COUCH and chair, traditional styling, only 4 months old, $300 firm. Call 756 5842 after 7:30p.m.

NATURAL GAS, Central furnances, Enforced air space heaters. 100,000 BTU and 50,000 BTU. Gas stoves, 21", 24" and 30" Can be seen at 311 Hillcrest Drive.

NEW GREENVILLE City Directo ry for sale one copy available. Reduced to $100. Cali 752 4348 be tween9a m. and 6 p m.

OLD FASHION Cedar Christmas trees, 3' to 12', $4 to $15. Cable 8. Craft, 818 Dickinson, 752 0715. Limited Supply

PORTABLE YARD BUILDINGS.

Great for workshop, storage, etc Any size, any color. 4 contemporary models to choose from. Can be seen on 264 By pass before Carolina East Mall entrance or call 756 1502 any time and leave message

PUERTO RICAN and Hyman white .sweet potatoes $8.00 bushel Call 825 6821

PUMP - Crane Deming, horse power shallow well pump. Never been used $60. 752 7740

KEROSUN PORTABLE HEATERS. Factory rebate sale continues at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avehue.

LADIES CLOTHES,

Cheap Call758 2585.

sizes 14 16

LADIES 3 SPEED Bike $65 00 Call 756-2150, ask for Norman.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available: 756-4?42-atter- &^p.m , Jim Hudson.

LOG SPLITTERS, lawn and garden equipment Sales and Rentals Call 756-0090 anytime.

MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS:

Cinderella in pink ball gown. Napoleon and Josephine, 24" Pussycat. 756 9070

DUCK DECOYS, 1 dozen, $40 Excellent condition. Call 756 2208

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MARY KAY cosmetics. Phone 756 3659 to reach your consultant for a facial or reorders

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CHRISTMAS TREES

Fresh Cut, Well Limbed-Pitt County Grown On Greentree Farm by the Winchesters All Sizes From 4 ft. To 8 ft.

Special Trees For Apartments and Mobile Homes

Dickinson Ave. Extention    1    Mile    West    Of    Moose    Lodge

REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE

large, golden harvest Hotpoint, looks very good, runs like new; size is 28"x28"x63'2" Priced to move fast at $165. Call 752 4348.

CLASSIFIED display

074

Miscellaneous

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS,

shampooers, and uprights. Call Dealer, 756 6711

SCHEFFLERA 6W tall in large

Clastic pot. $25. Rocker with rope ottom, needs retinishing, $25.

SEARS WEIGHT BENCH wittv double leg lift and pully system. 756 4058

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool (iorhpany

SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale, now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69 88

SHINGLES $13.50 per square 30 pound felt, $3.95 roll. 8"xl6' masonite, $2.70 Number 1 Builders Supply, Mount Olive, 658 6586.

SINGER SEWING MACHINE with cabinet, $200 or near offer Call 756 7627atter5:30p.m.

SMALL REFRIGRATOR for sale Perfect tor office or dormifory room; (18'2"x19"x19") Reduced $50toonly$79 Call 752 4348.

STEREO. Complefe Pioneer unit. Direcf Drive turntable, 4 channel receiver, 2 CS811 speakers Will throw in Dolby 8 track player/recorder. $500 752-7740.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

HOTPOINT MICROWAVES

Prices Start At

$29900

90 Days Same As Cash $1000 Instant Credit

om0Com$'C

auFVMUi eocxxwn

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

1978 Ford Mustang

Sslling prtes $2600.00, $650 Oown payment, Ca-Sb nr Trarin withanproved credit, 24 payments at $98.27, APR 17%, Lite insurance included, Total financed amount $1987,74, Total note due $2358,48, Plus NC Sales Tax and License.

Garolirta East Sales

264 Bypass & Hooker Road Greenville N.C.

756-5860

Owned and Operated by Dallas Tripp & Rickie Moore

West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 8:00 fo 5.00

Also Stores In Tarboro And Rocky Mount

At

See Us For Your Needs... Sales and Service

B&R Tractor, Inc.

Your Down East JD Dealer"

Hwy. 64 East (919)793-5128 Plymouth, NC

Live Out Of The Area?

Use Our New Watts Line 1-800-682-2401 Parts & Service & Sales

Oscar Ross, Jr. General Manager Gary Frymier, Sales Manager Elmer Oliver, Salesman

^ORLD IMPORJ AurO PARTS V\/AREROUSE

FARR-CARR, INC.

1530 S. Evans Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Phone; (919) 756-9833

WE SPECIALIZE IN ALL FOREIGN CAR PARTS

Compare Prices Anywhere - Then Come See Us!

Air Filters Brake Pads

Fuel and Water Pumps Gas Tank Caps

And Much More!

SPECIAL

1300,1500, & 1600 Valve Gasket Covers

Only

25

Each

JExpires^ecembw^^

Toll Free 800-682-9816

THiNK

New Cars are Expensive! Ibu Know it and

BROWN & WOOD, INC.

Knows it

BROWN & WOOD, INC.

ONLY SELLS THE BEST IN QUALITY AND SAFETY DO YOU DESERVE ANY LESS?

QUALITY IS PRICEIess

ON SALE NOW

4 DR SEDAN SPECIAL SALE PRICE OF $8378 13 WITH $1500 DOWN 48 MONTHLY INSTALLMENTS AT 13 APR TOTAL FINANCE CHARGE OF $2697 87. INCLUDES CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE.

VALUE IS PRICEIess

ON SALE NOW

SOLID VALUE AND PURE DRIVING EXCITEMENT INCREDIBLE LOW PRICE

*199

PER MONTH

*9900

PLUS FREIGHT & TAX

THiNK

BROWN & WOOD, INC.

Dickinson Ave.    752-7111

aiidyouwilllniy





6-A. Hand-Carved Wooden Parrot

with ring and chain.

Gift-boxed...........     $fi

6-B. Solid Oak Decorator Shelf

makes a charming display of knick-knacks, plants. 2OV2 X 20 in.

Gift-boxed............. ^10

6-C. Oak-Finished 2-Tier Stand enhances any decor. Features rattan accents. 24 inches tall.

IIV2 inch diam. Gift-boxed____^20

Automatic Batterv Charger.

"Give your batteries added life with our handy battery charger.    *

Gift-boxed..................^12

6-E. Stationery Gift Ideas. Your choice of three desk organizers, plus a roll-along with pen and    paper.    ^

Gift-boxed, each .....  $5

6-F. Tiffany-Styled Candleholdere. Choose Santa Claus, Christmas tree or wreath. Votive candles included.

Gift-boxed, each  .....$3

6-G. Telephone Dial Index in gold or silver metallic finish.

4x6 inches. Gift-boxed, each... *3

5-H, 24-Pice Feit Pen Set in a rainbow of colors. Handy carrying case included Regular.

Size.......j    $c

6-J. Metal Fly Ashtray.' ' '

Just lift his wings to extinguish ^

your cigarettes. Gift-boxed   .^3

6-K. Genuine Alabaster Ashtrays:

   $I    Opalescent ^

Ashtray .    9    Ashtray $6

6-L. 12-Pocket Cassette Album.

Gift-boxed....................53

6-M. Executive Desk Set includes memo minder, telephone index and pen.* _ Choice of colors. Gift-boxed ...* 10 6-N. Musical Bell Wind Chime done in blue or white ceramic.

Gift-boxed....................

6-0. Deluxe Lighted Magnifier features 3-inch optical lens

and bulb Gift-boxed...........

6-P. Choice Wood Photo Holders:

Photo    -Double

Cube .....55    Frame ____^6

6-C





V

-Su-.

Jf*

K

i

nlSlTr

^ent^

MERIT

Filter

ht lt>\N 'i.ir ci;^aIvttl lh.lI . h.in'4t'd MnoUint;-

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarane Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heatth.





C-14 The Daily Retlectof, Greenville, N C Sunday, December 11,1983

Complete 'Nutcracker' To Be Presented Ideas On Video Games

       .    -        -    .    I    iiiMiii^ii      Dtrp.    fi    L'uiicA    viHon    oampci    mediate    feedback.    bi

The North Carolina Academy of Dance in Greenville will present three two-hour performances of the complete "The Nutcracker" ballet Dec. 17-18 in the auditorium of Ayden-Grifton High School

This will be the first performance in a number of >ears in this area of the complete two-hour ballet featuring the internatinally k n tr w nm u s i c b y Tchaikovsky.

Performances will be at 7 p.m. on Saturday. Dec. 17. and at 3 and T p.m. on Sunday. Dec. 19. Tickets are priced at S4 in advance and S4.3(i at the door. A special patron block of tickets of four reserved seats is being offered at S2.i.

Sherry 1 Mercer is the director of this favorite holi-day ballet entertainmont which has choreography by four persons - Jill Robinson. Elizabeth Pope, .Anna Sistare and Ms Mercer.

Costumes for the large .io-member cast were designed by Patrice Ale.xander of the East Carolina University Drama Department. Set designer is Doug Mitchell, drama teacher on the Ayden-Grifton faculty, and props are by John Spa nolo

nnaiZnthvSholar

Dancers from the East Carolina Dance Theater and the Fayetteville Dance Theater will appear as guest performers, and will include ECU Summer Theater star John Kuhns in the role of Drossylmeyer. Kuhns was a magician in the Summer Theater presentation of "Pippin."

Dancers with primary roles in the production are: Heidi Schollenberger as Clara: Connie Wallace as Fritz: Mitchell Riggs, the Nutcracker Prince; John Kuhns. Drossylmeyer; Carmela Weber, the Doll; Anna Harrington in the role of Raggedy Ann Doll; Sandi Kannen as the Soldier DolU and Ingrid Lalik. the Mouse King.

Also, Todd Ellis and Carmela Weber as the --Spamisli couple.^Ereddie Heath and Christy Garrison as the Chinese couple; John Perkins as the Russian; Sarah Burden and Alison Hendrix, the Mirlitons: and Kerri White, the Sugar Plum Fairy.

Dancers appearing as jesters are: Blair French, Carmela Weber, Ingrid Lalik, .Anna Harrington, Christy Garrison and Sarah Burden.

Children's Day At Gray Gallery

Excerpts from the North Carolina Academy of Dance Arts' production of "The Nutcracker" ballet will be presented irom 2 to 3 p.m. today in Gray Gallery. School ot Art. East Carolina University. The full work will be shown at Ayden-Grilton fligh .School Dec 17-18

All area children ages ,')-12 are inviied by the sponsors to attend this' fourth annual celebration sponsored by the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council.

264 PLAYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE 6 Miles West Of Greenville On U S 264 (Farmville Hwy.)

NOW

SHOWING

AT YOUR ADULT .-ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

SUtnit DANIELLE LISADLEEUW * JOHN LESLIE MAI-LIN IS Sirin Inttoducmo JOAN VICTORIA SLICK ANGEL BURGON VICTORIA SLICK Prod Rv ROY McBRlOE i JOE SHERMAN DirKiMt By JOE SHERMAN RATEO X IN COLOR

756-0848 showtime 6:00

Doors Open 5i4S

PER-FLO TOURS, INC.

HWY. 70 BYPASS P. 0. BOX 1452 GOLDSBORO, N.C. 27530

778-2022 OR

FLO & BOB PERKINS 1-800-672-5889

WE NOW OWN OUR OWN MOTOR COACHES. CALL US IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO CHARTER ONE FOR YOUR GROUP.

FLORIDA, EPCOT, DISNEY WORLD Dec. 27-Jan. 1

NEW YORK CULTURAL Dec. 7-11 1984

FLORIDA - KEY WEST Feb.3-12, Mar. 2-11,

Apr. 6-15

FLORIDA, EPCOT, DISNEY WORLD Feb. 21-26,

Mar. 20-25, Apr. 24-29

DEEP SOUTH Mar. 24-Apr. 1

HAWAII Mar. 28-Apr. 9

CALIFORNIA Apr. 28-May 19

WORLDS FAIR & DEEP SOUTH May November 1984 Weekly Departures

Write or Call for more information on these and other tours available.    _

Grav Gallerv and the Pitt County Community schools.

Dancers taking part in the excerpts are .Anna Harrington. ^andi Kannen, Carmela Weber. Heidi Schellenberger, Christy Garrison. Blair French. Allison Hendrix. Sarah Burden and Ingrid Lalik.

.Also being presented in the celebration at Gray today is Middle Eastern Folk Dancing by Donna Whitley, and Christmas carols to be played by 8-year old Farah Lisa Whiiley-Sebti A singing of Christmas carols will be directed by Carolyn Powell.

A special, and new. feature of the celebration is the ornament contest Children may take part by bringing a handmade, original ornament, Ornaments will be judged on creativity in three different age groups: ,5-6,7-9 and 10-12

Those attending the celebration can also view the cprrent exhibition in the gallery. "Contemporary Photo Phantasy ." a collection by noted .Umencan photographers

Concert Today

RALEIGH - A program ot holiday music especially for families is being performed at 3 p m. today by Glenn Fox at the N, C. Museum of Art. Raleigh, The concert will combine piano, guitar and vocal music drawn from mountain, European, rock and gospel sources. The concert is free and open to the public.

DONT FORGET OUR FULL SERVICE TRAVEL AGENCY CRUISES TICKET RESERVATIONS EVERYTHING YOU NEED!

KEIIE.XRSING \S(FNF Si\ daiuers in costume rehearse one of the dances in The .\utcracker," being presented for three performances at Ayden-iirifton High .'vchool at 7

p.m. Saturday, Dec. h. and again at:: and 7 p.m. Sunday, Dec. IS. Tickets are $1 in advance and $l5(i at the door. (Refleetor Photo bv.lerrc Ravnor)

ByG.S. KHALSA

SEATTLE (UPI) - Video games arent doing much to educate American youth, but their psychological power to grab attention couW lead to a more computer-literate society, a husband and wife team contend in a new book.

If they are right, it will hearten many parents who fear video games leave their youngsters ignorant of other uses of computers.

Flashing lights, noises, the thrill of battle and visions of monstrous creatures are only part of why video games are so mcu fun, say Geoffrey and Elizabeth Loftus, both University of Washington psychology professors, in Mind at Play: The Psychology of Video Games.

On a deeper level, video games captivate the mind in the same way a ]ab experiment conditions a rat to push a lever for food. For video games, people are the rats, quarters replace the lever )ushing and the "food" )ecomes the intermittent, partial victories of the game.

The use by video game makers of a "partial reinforcement schedule" is probably more responsible than anything for the industry's success, the Lof-tusessay.

Normaliy, a player can amass several hundred points and blast scores of monsters or invading aliens before the first game is over. As the player improves, the V ideb" gme responds by becoming increasingly more difficult. Thus, beginners arent discouraged and advanced players dont become bored.

Again, video games can be infinitely varied because of their computer base.' thus appealing to a broader spectrum of society.

At present, video games have little direct educational merit beyond developing in-tuition and eye-hand coordination. But kids know that computers are behind the fun-filled complexity, the Loftuses say. and some are being motivated to design their own games.

"Since we are moving into a society where computer literacy is going to be as critical as being able to read and write, these games may be giving people an edge in terms of acquiring that computer literacy," Geoffrey Loftus said.

Conventional educational computers provide im

mediate feedback, but lack the motivational grip that video games exert on the mind, he said. But a number of ongoing research projects across the country are seeking to develop more interesting learning computers.

Geoffrev Loftus said the resultis that far more males are playing video games than females

We stop at nothing to please you - including traffic lights, pedestrians, and intersections. (756*0088)

COUPON-COPON -COUPON

m

421 Greenville Blvd.

Phone 756-0825

For

SPECIAL

(Pizza Only)

OFFERGOODTHRU DECEMBER 18.1983

(Not Good With Any Other Specials)

Buy One Pizza At Regular Price And Get Another Of Same Value Or Less Free.    tdr

UCOUPON-COUPON-COUPO

Archie Nobles & Sons 315 Stantonsburg Road

(Across from Doctors Park) 758-4600

OPEN IVIon.-Fri. 11 am-10 pm Sat. 5 pm-11 pm OPEN Sundays

Steaks    Daily Specials

alad Bar Sandwiches

Take-out service    banquet facilities

Mixed Beverages Now Available!

Happy. Hours: Mon., Wed., & Fri. 3 P.M.-7 P.M.

WE ARE NOW SERVING FRESH SEAFOOD AS WELL AS STEAKS!

Shrimp Dinner Special.................^2.89

Trout Dinner Special ............  .^2.89

Served With Cole Slaw, French Fries & Hushpuppies

.O'"

JESTER Singer Barrv Manilow in white face and the costume of a jester performs with dancers during the shooting of the video for his new single. "Read Em and Weep in ,\ew

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York (it\ receiulv. Ii s the first single from Manilows (ireatesi Hits II album. The video will be released in late ,\o\ ember. (AP Laserphoto)

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Water Tree Lounge

presents

The Bowl Games

Saturday. Dec. 10 8 pm Independence Bowl Air Force vs. Ole Miss

Saturday. Dec. 17 8 pm Florida Citrus Bowl Maryland vs. Tennesse

Thursday. Dec. 22 8 pm Hall of Fame Bowl W. Virginia vs. Kentucky

Friday. Dec. 23 9 pm Holiday Bowl Missouri vs. BYU

Saturday. Dec. 24 3 pm Sun Bowl Alabama vs. SMU

Monday. Dec. 26 8 pm Aloha Bowl Penn St. vs. Washington

Thursday. Dec. 29 8:30 pm Liberty Bowl lotre Dame vs. Boston College

Friday. Dec. 30 Gator Bowl Iowa vs. Florida 8 pm

Peach Bowl UNC vs. Florida 3 pm

Saturday. Dec. 31 8 pm Bluebonnet Bowl Oklahoma St. vs. Baylor

Monday. Jan 2 Cotton Bowl 1:30 pm Georgia vs. Texas

Fiesta Bowl 1:30 pm Pittsburgh \>s. Ohio State

Rose Bowl 5 pm Illinois vs. UCLA

Orange Bowl 8 pm Miami-Fla vs. Nebraska

Sugar Bowl 8 pm Michigan vs. Auburn

pen Vz hour before game begins.

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THE BIG CHILL ii

SHOWS MON.-FRI. 7:05-9:00 SAT.-SUN.

3:15-5:10-7:05-9:00

WEEKDAYS 3-7-9 SAT. & SUN. 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00

WEEKDAYS 3-7:10-9:00 SAT-SUK 3:30-5:20-7:10-9:00

PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

NOW!

SORRY, NO BARGAIN MATINEE ON SUDDEN IMPACT"

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NOW!

MAKE

MY

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DIRTY

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SloiiingCNT EASTWOOD o-a SONDM .OCKt

SHOWS

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 2:40-4:50-7:00-9:10

ve- ja. e T8ITZ MANES

MON.-THRU FRI. 3:00-7:00-9:10

Cllp-Aiyl-Save

MOVIE INFORMATION ZW-ZeiO





nooff

Clairol Custom Care Setter

29

Reg. $39.99    ^

Velvet-like nylon flocked curling surface on rollers helps protect hair from tangling, pulMng and the stress of most styling. Hair wraps on curling surface and stays in place. Unrolls smoothly.

$Q'^^EE

T V^r I AFTER REBATE

Vida! Sassoon -1200 watt* pro dryer

Sears Reg. Price $18.99 Sears Sale Price $ 12.99 Less Mail-in Rebate.. $3.00 Your cost after rebate.......

Hair specialist Vidal Sassoon brings salon style beauty appliances to your home! Dryer has 3 heat and 2 speed settings, concentrator attachinent

*4 OFF

Sassoon curling brush

Sears Reg. Price $9.99 Sears Sale Price $7.99 Less Mail-In Rebate. .$2.00

Your cost after rebate.......

Professional style curling brush has nylon ring bristlea 3/4-in. brush for larger curls.

R^TE Vidal

*4 OFF

Sassoon curling iron

Scars Reg Price $9.90 Sears Sale Price $7.99 LeasMalhln Rebate... $2.00 Your cost after rebate..................

Professional style curling iron has 3/4-ia barrel for larger curia

7 0FFr2-in-lset

Sears Rag Price $16.99 Seats Sale Prica$11.99 Leas Mall-in Rebate... $2.00 Your cost after rebate.............................

Vidal Sassoon curling set includes control handle, 3/4-la curling and styling brush attachment, travel case

REBATE Vidal

Give her quality! Our Carriage Court fine leather bags

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Prestigious leather bags priced for gift-giving. Choose from contemporary and classic styles in a seleciton of fashion colora Say how much you care with a new Carriage Court bag!

Ask about Sears Credit Plans





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KEWS

daily reflector :

GREENVILLE, N.C.

PEANUTS

SUNDaV, DECEMBER 11, 1983

' r    _______________

bv Charles Schulz

you KNOW HOW TO REP...U)Hy PON'T you REAP IT YOURSELF?

REAPINS takes effort..I HATE TO PO ANYTHIN6 THAT TAKES EFFORT

LISTENIN6 TAKES EFFORT V TOO, YOU KNOW...

I UlASNT 60IN6 TO LISTENj^

ANDY CAPP

(^in' my)

V >./AV -C

WHEN THEY'RE W UIl^33 STOP.

IJ30K, AN' LISTEN TD MV SORT, TEN TD ONE THEY'RE JUST

BEETLE BAILEY

bv Mort Walker

IT AAU6T 5E THAT NEV/, 5LOW/ WEAK, 0FF-TAR6ET SHELL THEYVE BEENI WORKINl OH

THuHK

<>tW3KiwBNlufi8vw<fcal, Inc. Waild

WHEH they HAVE IT PEKFECTEC> WAR MAY NOT BE SO BAP





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The pleasure is backBARCIAY

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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Detarminad That Cil^rene Smoldng Is Dangerous to Ybiv99% tar free.





121 Apartments For Rent

121 Apartments For Rent

121 Apartments For Rent

IN AYOEN 1 bearopm apartment 'Refrigerator, stove, and carpet $150a month. 746 6394 or 752 5167.

NEW ONE BEDROOM apartment for rent, I'j miles from medical school Call 756 8948.

NEAR HOSPITAL medical scnool New duplex townhouses available for immediate occupancy. $300 per month. No pets. 752 3152, ask for John or Bryant.

XINGSROW ' APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, ran^e, re frigerafor, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just off 10th Street

Call 752-3519

NEW TOWNHOUSE, Williamsburg Manor. Special decor, now availa ble Call 355 6522

NEW DUPLEX, 2 bedroom townhouse, heat pump, near hospital, $300. 756-6004

NEW TWO bedroom townhouse, Williamsburg Manor, energy effi cient, appliances, washer dryer hookup. $315. 756 0057

NEW ONE bedroom Convenient location. Washer/dryer hookups. $220 per month . 756 7417.

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex apart ment, no pets. Call 756 1821 after

3:15,

WILSON ACRE APARTMENTS.

1806 East 1st Street. New 2 and 3 bedrooms, washer/dryer hook ups, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis, pool, sauna, self-cleaning oven, frost free refrigerator. 3 blocks from ECU. Call 752-0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportunity.

NEW 2 BEDROOM townhouse Available January 1. 752 1010.

LANDMARK. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 3 blocks from Universi ty Heat, air and water furnished No pets 758 3781 or 756 0889

NICE 2 STORY 2 bedroom duplex, * located near downtown and college $225 756 5991.

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HOLIDAY TRAVELERS SAFETY CLINIC

Saturday, December 17,8:30-1:00 P.M.

Before you Take That Trip for the Holidays, stop by to see us at Subaru of Greenville for a FREE Safety Clinic. This Safety Clinic will provide following:

We will Check All Cooling, Fuel, Starting, Charging, Exhaust, and Ignition Systems

We will visually inspect your Tires, Shocks, Belts and Hoses

ii ,

Also Rcludes Sun Investigator Analyier.

THIS SPECIAL INCLUDES ALL MAKES AND MODELS

COUPON

Please Clip and Bring This Coupon For Your FREE

HOLIDAY TRAVELERS

SAFETY CLINIC

* Please Call For An Appointment

Subaru Of Oreenville

605 W. Greenville Blvd.

Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885

Greenville

COUPON

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121 Apartments For Rent

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal Included. We also have Cable TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 756-781S.

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din Ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862.

RIVER BLUFF otters 1 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments. Six months leases. For more Information call 758 4015.

SHENANDOAH, brand new apartments, townhouse and a flat. $300 per month and deposit. No pets. Bill Williams Real Estate 752 2615.

SPACIOUS 2 bedroom duplex In Shenandoah. Available Immediate ly. Days 758 6061; nights 758 1535

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10a.m. to5p m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

STUDENT HOUSING. Pirates Landing. Available second semester off Reade Circle. Private rooms, cooking facilities. $150 per month. For information call Clark Branch Management. 756 6336

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hookups, cable TV-, pool, club house, playground, Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT,

carpeted, central air and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup. Bryton hills, $275. 758 3311.

TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX

aoartrnent located in Mead owbrook Unfurnished $135 per month. Call 756 1900

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, t'l bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. Immediate occupancy.

756-0987

WEST KILLS TOWNHOMES

Located |ust I'a miles from the hospital and medical school, these units are designed to house two or more It you have a roommate and would love to have that second tull bath, give us a call Energy effi fiont^vu;iShpr and dryer hOOk UPS and a storage roOm for all those extras you just can't part with. Call us tor an appointment to rent these new two bedroom townhomes minutes from the hospital

Professionally managed Dy Ea

Remco East, Inc Weekdays Nights 8. Weekends

758 6061 752 7490

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GRANT BUICK INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

ROLLS BACK PRICES!!

1984 Buick Skyhawk

& Plus NC Sales Tax

1984 Buick Skylark

m/

stock1984 Buick Century

*10,798

PlusNC Sales Tax

Stock Number 84167

The Dealership That You Can Always Depend On!!

Weekdays: 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday: 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877

121 Apartments For Rent

129 ' Lots For Rent

I BEDROOM apartment, appliances furnished. Tenth Street, $100 per month, 'Call after 6 p.m., 524-5042.

VILLAGE TRAILER Park. Aydan. Pavad straats, city watar, sawaga, trash collaction. First nwmth fraa or wa pay moving axpansas. 746-2425 or 742:7148.

1 iebkOOM APARTMENT, heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn. $215,756 0S45 or 758 0635

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

1 BEDROOM - Near campus, am

elactric. No pets. $215. Call 756-3923.

MOBILt HME. No pats or chlldran. 7S2-S262 or 752-4008.

1 BEDROOM, efticiencv apart ment. $150monthly. Call 758-1570.

RENl" oR SALEI 12x60 2 bedrooms, washar/dryar, turnishad, carpet. Vary nice and cleani Availabla now. 7K 3619 or 758 1618.

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT locatad In Wintervllle, unfurnished. Available now. Call 758 1280 after 6 weekdays; anytime weekends.

TWO BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Furnished. Call 7S2-S63S.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, t<} baths, fireplace. Near Hospital $325 monthly. Deposit required. No pets. 355 2419or 756-6906after 6 p.m.

12X60, 2 bedroom, 1>/i bath, un furnished except stove, refrigera tor, washer/dryer, underpinned and tied down. Set up in small park. Park restrictions, no children, rto pets. $190 a month. Call 7S6-6697 after 6 p.m.

2 BEDROOMS, l<.ti baths. Ridge Place. Lease and d^slt required $300monthly. Phone 756-7310.

2 BEDROOMS, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups. No pets. 752-0180 before 5 p.m., 756 2766atte. 5 p.m.

12X60, 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, $160. Also 2 bedrooms with carpet. *125, No pets, no children 756 9491 or 7S8-074.

2 BEDROOM, close to university, most utilities furnished. $300 month. Lease and security deposit. No pets. Call 758 0491 or 756 7809,

2 AND 3 BEDROOM trailers tor rent - furnished. Behind Venters Grill. $140 and $170. Deposit re quired. 756 4982 after 4 p.m.

2 BEDROOM Townhouse 4 miles West of Hospital. Available January 1. Call 756 5780 weekdays, 752 0181 nights.

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer, air. No pets, No children. Phone 758 4857.

2 STORY one bedroom apartment. Brookwood Drive. $250 per month. Call 756-6336.

2 BEDROOM mobile home tor rent. Call 756-4687 from 9a.m. to8 p.m.

2 BEDROOM mobile home near Greenville. No pets. Call 746-3734.

211 RIVER BLUFF ROAD, 2 bedrooms. $245 per month, $245 deposit. Call 1-825 2091 before 9 a m. and after 5 p.m.

2 BEDROOM, washer/dryer, central heat and air, carpet, fully furnished. No pets, no children. 756 2927.

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meade

Street - Near ECU. Central air, range, refrigerator, freshly painted. $270, Phone 756-7480.

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath. Located 7 miles West of Greenville on 264. Call 355 2474 or 753-5449.

123 Condominiums For Rent

135 Office Space For Rent

SKI AT SNOWSHOE Reduced rates! Call 758-0502 between 10 a.m. and lOp.m

BUILDING at 1209 Evans Street, 1140 square feet, heating and air. Reasonable rent. Days 752-8559 or nights 752 2498.

TWO BEDROOM University Townhouse Condominium (47), well located and ideally suited tor 1 or 2 people. We lived here originally and if you take an interest in yoiir home, you will love it! "Beat the Peak" saves you money. Smoke alarm. Bedroom bay window. Pool, Tennis courts and library nearby. Available January 1. 5275 per month. Call 752-4440 after 7:30 p.m. or weekends.

OFPiCE SPACE available

Available in December. Oft 264 By pass. 2100 square feet of prime office space. Well decorated. 12 month lease or longer, private parking. $1200 per month.

Call Clark-Branch Management

756-6336

TWO TOWNHOUSES available In Quail Ridge and Windy Ridge. One rents tor $500 per month, other for $475 per month. 3 bedrooms, 2'j baths. Call Ciark-Branch Manage merit, 756 6336.

OFFICE SPACE tor lease. Several suites and single offices available. Utilities and janltorlal services Included. Answering service and sec retarlal assistance available. For more Information call 752-4915,

2 BEDROOMS, Ij baths, pool, cable, water Included. Available now or January 1. $250. 756-5346.

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J.T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.

TERRIFIC OFFICE LOCATION

for rent - Located In the 2700 block of East lOtb Streep one of the most heavily travelled streets In Greenville; large and small offices at extremely reasonable rates. For additional ihfonnatien, call Real Estate Brokers, 752-4348.

127 Houses For Rent

COUNTRY SETTING. miles

from city limits. 2 bedrooms, couples only. Rent and deposit each, $250. 355 6500.

HOMES FOR RENT In Grifton. $200 to $500, Cali Max Waiers at Unity, 1 524 4147 days, 1 524 4007 nights.

UP TO 2,500 SQUARE feet each

location Prime office space available at 3205 South Memorial Drive and 2820 East 10th Street, Phone 756 5991.

HOUSES AND Apartments in Greenville. Call 746 3284or 524-3180.

THREE BEDROOM, 1'] bath, nice neighborhood. $375 plus deposit. Call 355 6966 after 5 p.m.

1,200 SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on Evans Street. Price negoitable. 752-4295/756 7417.

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park ing. Call 758 2300 days.

2 BEDROOMS, large combination kitchen and dining. $260 per month. Call 752 2025.

608 ARLINGTON BOULEVARD -

Suite of two offices with reception area. Utilities furnished. 560 square feet Van Fleming Jr , 756 6235 or 758 2887

3 BEDROOM. 1'} baths in Elmhurst. Available January 1st, $350. Smith Insurance Realty, 752-2754

3 BEDROOMS, 1'2 baths, garage Available January 1st. $350 mon thiy. Lease and deposit 756 6365.

137 Resort Property For Rent

3 BEDROOMS, l>2 baths, near Eastern Elementary School $350. 757 0634

wintergRen sK resort - i bedroom fully equipped condominium For more information, call 355 2341 after 6:30 p.m.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, family neighborhood, near schools, oil included, I4UU square feet, 752 1050.

138 Rooms For Rent

3 BEDROOM house in Simpson Central heat and air, stove furnished Shown by appointment only. Call 752 6471, if no answer call 7^^2 1503, leave message.

near university. Deposit. $65 per month plus utilities. 756 0659

PRIVATE FURNISHED bedroom for male. Available February 16 Across from college. Call 758 2585

3 BEDROOM HOUSE in Ayden Phone 746 3674.

UNIQUELY FURNISHED room for non smoker. $150 a month includes utilities and phone Deposit re quired Call Karen 756 4623 after 5

3 BEDROOMS, 2 tull baths, living room/ dining room, big den, central heat Fully furnished for instant living Available from January 1st to March 3lsf. Excellent ,lo.cation, near ECU, schools and supermarkets. Married couple or small family only. No pets $455 monthly Phone 756 9450

142 Roommate Wanted

ROOMMATE WANTED pro

fessional male to share 2 bedroom townhouse. Call 8 to 5, 757 4701.

143 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE UPPER CLASSMAN

Young Professional to share '-j rent. Pool, laundry, bus rout#. Call Pamela at 752-W51 aHer 5:30 p.m.

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2

bedroom traUw, a month and '-i utilltlas. Ftmales only I Call Cindy at 758-7042 between 11 and i Sundays 757 1073.

LOOKING FOR NEAT mature male college student. Private r^ with shared bath available. 1 bitxk from campus. Rent $125 month plus deposit. Call Kyle between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. only, 758-6708.

MALE to SHARE home near U.M. Conlay, $160 Includes utilities, washer dryer, phone, heat. 756-4164 or 756-6735

ROOMMATE WANTED to share z

bedroom condominium near Greenville Athletic Club, prefer non-smoking female professional. Call 756-7164 after 4 p.m.

ROOMMATE NEEDED. House s miles from .country. '/i .expenses.

Ca!l758-8158atter5p,m. -    __

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

143

RoommattWanttd

TWO RESPONSIBLE temaie roommates needed for Mcend semester. Large house privafe' bedroom, 'z block from campus.; $100 plus utilities. 408 Rotary, AvenuO.    ^

144 WBntcdToBuy

BEASLY LUMBER Products wlllt pay up to $150 per M for good grade, standing Pine Timber. Also top. prices paid tor good grade Pine logs, delivered to Scotland Neck mill.* Call Gene Baker 826-4121 or 826 4203.

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood.

timber. Pamlico Timbor Company,. Inc. 756 8615.

WANTED LARGE OLD oak deskT -and oak bed. Call 756 3428.    '

WANTED TO BUY standing timber, large or small tracts. 746-* 6825 or 746-2041.    *

2 TO 5 ACRES OF land - suitable tor. house and garden within 10 miles of Greenville. Call 752-4348.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE TO BE MOVED

3 room house with bath. Approximately 700 square feet. Ideal for cabin or retreat house. Located on Pactolus Highway. Just off 3reene Street, Greenville.

Price includes buflding, move and foundation.

*6,500

J.W. LANDENi SONS, INC.

Houbb Moving Contractori Day 758-8575    OrMnvillB    Night    756-4031

JEANNETTE COX AGENCY

REALTOR 756-1322

1516 Greenville Blvn.

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO 'GREENVILLE

Cali 756 1322 or write P O Bo 667, Greenville, N C. tor your tree copy of "Homes For Living", a monthly publication packed with pictures, details and prices of homes and available locally

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO A NEW CITY

Get your tree copy of "Homes For Living", In the city you are going to Know the real estate market before you get there Your copy is in our office. We can help you buy, sell or trade a home any place in the nation.

TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

$35,000 Hillsdale, 3 bedroom, 1 bath bungalow. Good investment pctsntlal. $54,500 -Windy Ridge. Thinking about investment property? Think about this Windy Ridge townhoujse. 3 bedrooms, 2'/2 baths, lots of extras Currently leased for $450 per month,

157,500 - New Listing. Hspfseshoe Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick ranch that features large lot, garage, dining room, spacious den with fireplace, lots of extras. Call today. *

$88,000- New Listing. Grifton area. Very nice brick ranch on one acre that features double garage, patio, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Better hurry.

$72,000 - Lakewood Pines. The charm that says "You have come home" welcomes you to this lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch with gar-age, Beautifujjiacky^rd. All formal

areas. ..... .....

We have several nice homes that qualify for the new N.C. Housing Money. Call for details.

Call today about our new construction In Club Pines, Belvedere and Brentwood.

756-6810

ZERO IN ON A NEW HOME

WITH NORTH CAROLINA HOUSING FINANCE MONEY, AVAILABLE

THRU HOME FEDERAL

SAVINGS

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The Daily HeHector. Greenville. N.C. Suf>day. Decemt>ef 11. 1963

WIKKK AN WORK TRADITIONS" - Two examples of traditional work patterns in \merita are shown in the photographs above and at right, \bove. students at Tulane Iniversitv in New Orleans are shown trving out an experimental ovster shucking device. The time consuming task of shucking ovsters with a special knife and heav v gloves has long been the onlv logical wav to remove the seafood delicacv from its rough shell. \t right is ( arolvn (orwell. who plavs the role of Pilgram Filizabeth Warren at the Plimoth _ Plantation in Plymouth, Mass. In this demonstration for visitors, she splits wood in a manner in use for centuries. < AP l.aserphotos Wood splitting photo bv .lohn fioldiei.

Group Wants To Be Remembered

Bv MARY MacA KAN \ss(Kated Press Writer

.\IOl.\T LEBA.N'ON. Pa AP In the lirst years ol 'hi.' century, they were country hoys .-scattered aCTos.s the land - lone 'cout.s. if you will -- isolated from, America's growing ci'ie' hut >earning tor con-'act with other youngsters Then a t'hicago puhlisher had an idea tor selling magazine' and tounded the Lone .Scou's ot ArneriCji. an off-'hif;o' ot 'hBo;. Scouts The .'e'ul; w,a- ,1 Oond among halt a .Tiiiiion ho;.' .Now all past ..Jtetjr:,e.ny.eii__.a ge: the. J.one -couts want '0 make sure he;- reno' torgotten

We re reail;. a last man '. cluh 'a;.s t'harle' .Merlin, k: o; ('lifiside Park N.] V.e re ge'*ir.g ;ew(-r. We re S. ..n our 7o' or 'e We re at. e-x'shtt ohgar.ization The Lone scout- Nourished tor .nine -.ear.' until their

magazine failed In ltT, the Lone Scouts became the Elheetian Legion, an association of I/tne Scout alumni bound only by "the spirit of our Lone Scout days.'.'"

the Lone .Scouts, incorporated in 191.5. appealed to rural fx)ys with the badges and camaraderie of the Boy .Scouts, all through the Lone .Scout magazine in which they could earn a byline The late William p Boyce, a native of nearby Plum and a tounder ot the Boy Scouts ot America, established the roagaz.ihe and , fbe..,.T.,,.OB,. Scouts ot America-The Lone Scouts were modeled on Indian lore, existed without a tro(jp or leader, relying solely on the honim system .New Lone Scouts went out alone, during a lull mfxin. and extending one arm toward the skv. tcx>k the Lone

Scout pledge "Do a mseful thing each day."

Boys kept track and reported their own progress toward medals for proficiency in first aid. camping and other areas.

Boyce merged the Lone Scouts with the Boy Scouts in 1924, when the automobile put all these places where Boyce's ^magazines were circulating on main highways. " says Charles Wright. 82^ "His circulation went down, his advertising went down "

.Many former members forgot the Lone Scouts. But. .Merlin couldn't forget.

He mimeographed the first Elbeetian newsletter during the graveyard shift at Western Union in 1927,

The name Elbeetian he tixik from the phonetic of LBTian. the initials of Lone Beaver Tribe, a group of .New .Jersev Lone Scouts who

occasionally met.

Since 19J4, when the first Elbeetian reunion was held in , suburban Pittsburgh, members have gathered annually except during World War II. Tangible results of Merlins efforts include the monthly newsletter, a small museum of memorabilia in .North Carolina and a plaque at the Boyce Building in Chicago.

But the Lone Scouts want more. Wright aod otliers have started a campaign to get the U.S. Postal Service to issue a commemorative siampin 985. the VUth anniversary of Lone Scouting.

To improve their chances ol persuading the Postmaster General's Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee, they've combined efforts with the Boy Scouts, who celebrate their 75th anniversary in 1985.

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UNC-G Gallery Acquires New Art

GREENSBORO -Twe^-ttiree worts of art rangiiig from a 1946 pencil and chaOt drawing tqr the late artist John D. Graham to a pair of wateradors by Wilmington artist Claude HoweU. have bei acquired

Greembore. Ei^iteen other works were gifts to the gallery and wiD be included in the DoOard Collection, which now numbers 364

fw its Dillard Collection.

The new additions are among 136 works which have been on display (ending* today) in the 1963'Art on Paper Show Five of the new pieces were purchased from the show with a grant provided by Mlard Paper C^pany (rf

pieces.

The Howell watotolors are a gift ft(n Mrs. Edythe E. Wyrick of Greensboo in memory (rf her late husband Charles L. Wyrirt, Sr., who had w(Hrked with Dillard hnxn 1933 until his death in 1976. The 1981 Howell wints are; Cape Lookout Soies No 7 - Rain Squalls and Cape Lookout Series No. 13 -Reflected Light

The Graham piece, dating back to 1946, is the oldest of the acquired works. accxMxl-ing to curator James Tucker. Fimds for the five purchases and exposes for this years Art on Paper Show were made possitde by a $17,500 grant fitnn Dilhutl Paper Company. The firm has given the gallery $239,500 to fund the ^ow since its in-cepticm in 193. The Dillard firm also gave $100,000 in Nov. 1962 toward the con-striKtion (rf UNC-Gs planned

JJ) 5 piillinn nrt r-aniar

In addition to the Graham' work, the other four [ueces purchased for the collection are ones by Robert Carvin. Robert Longo, Sylvia P. Mangold, ai^ Ann Carter Pollard.

The Weatherspoc Gallery located on the University North Carolina a Greensboro campus, is open free of charge to the public from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m Tuesdays through Fri(uys and from 2 to 6 p.m. on Sundays.

Calendar Of December Events In NX. And Va.

NORFOLK, VA. - TTie Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel association has published a calendar of December events in the Virgina Tidewater area and areas of eastern North Carolina of interest Jo the public. Telephone numbers Jisted are for additionaFdetails and ticket reservations. Area code for the Virginia sites is 804, and for the North Carolina sites, all are 919.

The events are:

Virginia Beach - Today, and Dec. 16 and 17 - "I Never Sang for My Father," drama. Little 'Hieater of Virginia Beach. 3 p.m. today. 8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday. 428-9523.

Wilmington - Now through Dec. 23 - Christmas Candlelight Tour and Dinner, Poplar Grove Plantation, 1850 manor house, 686-9989.

Norfolk I Remember Mama," comedy-drama. Tidewater Dinner Theater. 461-2933.

Washington. N. C. - Today, Dec. 12 and 13. Religious Arts Festival - Liturgical arts, crafts, sponsored by Beaufort County Arts Council. 946-2504.

Norfolk - "A Christmas Carol." the Virginia Stage Company at Wells Theater downtown. Tuesdays-Fridays, 8 p.m., Saturdays 5 and 7 p.m., Sundays and Wednesdays, 2 p.m. 627-1234.

.New Bern - Now throi^gh Dec. 23 - Fifth annual 18th century Christmas season, rryon Palace complex. Evening candlelight tours, decorations, music, carolers, etc. 638-5109.

Williamsburg - Today through Jan. 1 -"The Toys & Joys at Christmas, a traditional Christmas exhibition. The Ab^

Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Gallery, Daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m' 229-1000, extension 2364.

Kenansville - Dec. 14-25 - Twelve Days of Christmas in Historical Kenansville, sponsored by Chamber of Commerce. 296-1827.

Williamsburg - Dec. 15 - Grand illumination, official cerebration opening the Christinas fortnight, concluding with fireworks at 5:30 p.m. - Dec. 25 - Selected exhibition buildings will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m, 229-1000, extension 2364.

ADOLFO OF RAVENNA ... a 1946 pencil and chalk drawing by the late John 0. Graham, is among five new artworks purchased by Weatherspoon Art Gallery. IN('-G from the annual .Art on Paper Show, with funds provided by the Dillard Paper Company of Greensboro. Additionally. 18 pieces were given to the collection.

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The Daily Reflector,Greenville. N.C. Sunday. December il. 1983    C-1Assists Others To New Voices

Twelve years ago Brink Lilley was a Pitt County ABC officer with 25 years to his credit. A Martin County native whod lived in Greenville for many years, he liked to take his wife dancing and, with her, had won a few trophies for ballroom dancing. Hed even taught others to dance. He enjoyed his Shriners activities.

In 1972 his life was forever altered by discovering he had cancer of the throat - altered in ways, hed learn later, that would open new avenues of service for him, but, of course, he didnt know that at the time. Tissue from his throat, including his larynx (voicebox), was removed to stop the spread of the cancerous cells.

The surgery was successful and Lilley was thankful. But then began the tough and tedious job of learning to talk in an entirely new way of developing a new voice. There was the temptation, he said, not to go through all that effort to simply give up on mingling with and communicating with people to just withdraw _and.feelsorry for^hinKelf.

But that was not Lilleys nature. He wanted to keep on working, to keep on dancing, to keep on with his civic activities, to keep on being with people.

So, with the help of Hugh Winslow of Greenville, a previous laryngectomee, he began developing a new voice for himself through esophageal speech.

Normal speech is formed by air produced by the lungs being pulsated through the vocal cords and then formed into meaningful words, phrases and sentences the articulators - the lips, teeth, tongue and palate. Once a person has had a laryngectomy, the pulsation-producing vocal cords have been removed and the trachea or windpipe from the lungs has been rerouted to an opening in the neck through which the person breathes. No longer are the nose, mouth and throat used for breathing. There are structures in the throat that can be substituted for the missing ones. The area where the top of the esophagus joins the throat is similar to the vocal cords. Those who learn esophageal speech must trap air into the upper part of the esophagus and immediately force it back. As it passes the narrow throat muscles, it is made topulsate, producing a sound similar to that of a vowel.

Through practice and more practice, they can learn to produce the vowels in this manner. Then they begin to practice the consonants. Then they form short words and begin to add other sounds. Seldom do their voices sound as they did before, but they begin to communicate more and more clearly.

As he began to get his speech back, it dawned on Lilley what he had to do. He had to share himself with others - become a teacher of other laryngectomees. He decided then that he would never charge for his services. He said he finds no fault with others charging for the services they provide, but he sees this work as something he feels God would have him give7not sell, to his fellow man.

Now 10 years later, he probably has taught more than 50 laryngectomees to talk. My

Text & Photo

Bv Carol Tyer

DINKS GETTING HIS SOUND THROUGH REAL GOOD, Brink Lilley (right) says of Judge Dink James, one of his esophageal speech students. Judge James wife, Carolyn, takes part in the lessons with her husband, so she can assist him in practicing between sessions.

j)artners and I refer all our laryngectomies to Mr. Lilley, Dr. William Bost said. He does a magnificent job of teaching them and hes also taught patients from Duke and other medical centers.

Lilley not only teaches. He offers himself as a mentor and friend. Often he visits a patient facing a laryngectomy even before the surgery is done. I dont*have to say much, he said. The fact that I can talk at all and that Im living 12 years later is proof that its possible for people to recover and do right well.

Brink did so much for Barney and me that wasnt just teaching, Sally Bland, wife of Farmville area laryngectomee Barney Bland, said. He had a wealth of information that was helpful to Barney and to me about how to help Barney take care of himself.

Carolyn James of Greenville, wife of retired Judge Dink James, a laryngectomee of this year, said, Dink and I can never thank Brink enough for everything hes done for us. Hes inspired Dink to keep on trying to talk and hes shown me how to assist him. His wife, Jeanette, has been a wonderful friend to both of us, too.

Most of his students come to Lilleys house for their once-a-week lessons. Asked about his method of teaching, he said, Basically I started out teaching like Mr. Winslow had taught me, but Ive spent many an hour in research. I constantly teach myself new and better ways to teach. The doctors here buy me any book I want for this purpose.    -

No two patients are ever alike and teaching each one is different from the last, he said, not only in personality and problems, but also in the

nature and extent of their surgery . I can look at a person s X-rays and tell which vowels he or she can easily learn and which will be hard. Each one has to be treated as the individual he or she

Now Lilley is sharing himself in two new ways. Hes teaching Barney Bland everything he knows about teaching so Bland can teach as he does. This is another way of being sure that everyone who needs a teacher and friend after lar\nx surgery has one," he said,        

And hes just agreed to begin teaching a person recovering from a stroke to talk. This person s voice is apparently gone," he said, but I'm going to do everything Lean to help her gei it. back. God delivers when we ask and then work and thats what she and I are going to do. She's going to talk again."New Bern Native Likes Living in Guatemala

By KAHEN HAKKISON Sun Journal

( oinnuinity Editor

NEW BERN - A New Bernian who has lived in Guatemala, close to the El Salvador border, since 1981 said in an interview recently that the U.S. news media have distorted the extent of the problems in Central America.

The media in the U.S. make it appear that trouble is happening all over the country, said Susan Brock, who was in town visiting family and friends for the second time since she went to Guatemala as a Peace Corps volunteer.

Its not that way at all.

i dont feel at all threatened by the political violence, she said. Im more frightened of someone shooting me on the street here.

Political violence and guerrilla warfare have kept Central Americas largest country in turmoil for a decade. Ms. Brock said few of the countrys populace has been directly affected by the political upheavals primarily two military coups in the last two years because many of the people are so isolated.

If not for the radio, 1 would not have known of the second coup, she said. In fact, the radio is the main means of

communication in a country where 85 percent of the people are illiterate and the average daily wage is $2.

People there just want to farm and be left alone, she said.

Ms. Brock, who is 25, majored in Spanish and minored in Latin American studies at East Caro-lina University in Greenville.

Though s'ne finished her Peace Corps tour in September, she plans to return to Guatemala for at least a year and open a small bar and restaurant in Antigua with some other Peace Corps volunteers.

I feel at home there," she said. I like the lifestyle.

Ms. Brock would like to remain in Central America, if not Guatemala. Her restaurant job will provide her with an income so that she can pursue other interests, primarily international development working with Third World countries.

family health. Her experiences in Guatemala have led her to live with less and to re-evaluate her needs.

Life is too complex here, she said. You cant make up your mind. You go to buy a pack of cigarettes and there are 100 different brands to choose from.

I earned $210 a month in the Peace Corps, she added, and I could have subsisted on half of that.

She described Quesada where she lived for two years as a Clint Eastwood-town minus the tumbleweeds. Her^ home was made of adobe tile and consisted of one main room with dirt floors. For that, she paid $25 a month, which included electricity a luxury few Guatemalans can afford.

For the next year, she plans to study weaving and work on a volunteer basis with a private relief agency helping victims of the violence.

While she was in the Peace Corps, Ms. Brock taught health and nutrition in the public schools. She also conducted a half-hour radio program once a week on

Anything you can get in the United States you can get there for a price, she said.

She characterized Guatemalans as very friendly. About half the population is pure Mayan Indian, she said, and the other half are Latinos who seem to have either been to the United States themselves or have a friend or family member working in the states illegally. Ms. Brock said they will often work for a year and then return to Guatemala.

Although Guatemala is a relatively small country about the size of Tennessee the lack of transportation makes the country seem larger than it is.

Your idea of work changes there, she said. When you have to walk an hour and a half to see someone and then they are not there and you walk and hour and a half back, youre tired and probably dont do anything else that day."

How do Ms. Brocks parents feel about her decision to remain in Guatemala? Her mother admits she would have her daughter closer to home, but she said, Im not worried. She knows the situation there better than I do.

Mrs. Brock said Susans father. New Bern magistrate Raymond Brock, is very supportive of his daughters decision. He is also very adventuresome, she said.

To Guatemalans, Ms. Brock is referred to as La Gringa, the North American.

People are always telling me Ive adapted real well, she said. If you came into town, anybody could tell you where to find me.

Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie McGowan of Route 2, Greenville, and Mrs. Letha Brock of Win-terville are Susans grandparents.

SUSAN BROCK: 1 feel at home there. I like the lifestyle.

(Photo by Lindsey Wyatt.:





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E*16 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983Falklands See Building Boom Taking Shape

B> JOHN r.KONAKD Assiwialed Press Writer

STANLEY, Falkland Islands lAPi - Spring has arrived in the Falkland Islands, and with it has come a postwar building boom.

Eighteen months after British and Argentine soldiers stopped slaying each other on this windswept South Atlantic outpost, a new airport is being built, pre-fabricated houses are going up, roads are being repaved, immigrants are arriving and servicemefi are moving out of billets into newly built quarters.    V

This tin\- capital now has its first commercial banlis^ satellite earth station and a motorcycle rental shop. Soon come are a knitwear firm and a trawler fleet.

"No doubt about It.' said one old-timer, "you'd have to be half-blind not to see progress now,"

Finally, it seems, the Falklands are emerging from the shadow ot the British-Argentine war, which lasted 10 furious weeks and ended June 14, 1982. with the surrender of Argentine torces.

fwo hundred Jitty-tive Britons and 712 Argentines died in the conflict, set oft hy Argentina's invasion of the longtime British colon) 208 miles from its shores.

:TLs been quite remarkable." said Gerald Cheek. Stanley's civil aviation director "The military people have done a wondertul job buildiiig up their camps, and on the civilian side, roads and houses are being constructed. It's gone pretty well 111 a reall) short period."

ianders credit a combination of their own resniirce-

"Tm optimistic about the future because right is on the side of the Falkland Islanders. said Sir Rex Hunt, civil commissioner on the islands. "In time, more and more people will realize this."

A prime indication of Britain's commitment is the new airport being built by British workers 30 miles west of Stanley.

W'hen the $315-million field is finished in 1985. it will accommodate fighter-bombers and fully loaded transport planes - and guarantee that should Argentina threaten invasion again. Britain could rush in troops to stop it.

Stanley today shows some dramatic differences from the .day war ended.

N. For example, the roads. Starting in April, when a team from Britain arrived. Stanley has been girded by a network of two-lane roadways, and war-damaged streets have been resurfaced. Roads are consuming nearly $3.8 million out of a $45-million economic aid package.

Even more critical is housing, with dozens of homes damaged in the war. and with scores of Britons applying to come here to live. A year ago, the Falklands government placed an order for 54 new pre-fabricated homes. Now. two complexes have sprouted.

The Falklands' population of 1,800 has had a net growth of 29 since the surrender, the first gain since World War II.

Archie Mitchell, manager of the islands' first bank, said the new branch office reflects "a very large dollop of faith in the future.

"Weve put our feet down here. he added, "and we normally dont put our feet down and walk away."

Previously, locals banked with the Falkland Islands Co., the conglomerate subsidiary that owns much of the land and handles trade in the main local product, wool.

Others openning new business here include Richard and Grizelda Cockwel, who plan to produce distinctive Falklands knitwear.

David Hawkesworth, a Briton who brought his family to Stanley, plans a new restaurant.

"Its fantastic for the kids here." he said, adding that he found it safer than in England, "where youve got to know where your children are all the time

There have been other imports, some more successful than others:

-A shipload of 200 farm animals to replace those lost in the war - inevitably, the vessel was dubbed "Noahs Ark" -arrived Oct. 28. It was followed by other shipments: 30 sheep dog pups, and a collection of cats and canaries.

-A young couple froiy Britain arrived amid much ballyhoo to establish a fish n chips shop in Stanley, only to return home to even rnpre ballyhoo saying the islanders were remarkably unfriendly.

-Britains Cable and Wireless Co. has installed an earth station, providing 24-hour telephone and cable service via satellite. Before the war. the service shut down at night so the equipment could be used by the islands radio station,

The phone system in Stanley is still a hand-crank affair.

though, and communication with outlying farms remains hit-and-miss.

Recently, farmer Charlie McKenzie got bogged down in his Land Rover miles from home. With no working phones nearby, he radioed a'ham 8.000 miles away in Britain, who radioed back to a neighboring farm for help.

Fishing may give the islands a stable financial future. A British firm. Fortoser Ltd.. has announced plans to operate a shellfish trawler in a two-year feasibility test.

Though the 3.500 British servicemen number twice the Falklands population, both islanders and the military rate relations as good.

"Obviously soldiers out here when it's the middle of winter would rather be at home with their families, enjoying the sunshine." said Maj. Gen. Keith Space, the British commander. "But that's a very different thing from low morale."

The seasons are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere.

Able Seaman Tony Windsor, who was on board HMS Coventry when it was sunk by Argentine warplanes with the loss of 20 lives, returned to Stanley recently after a week on patrol aboard HMS Manchester.

He stopped to look at the memorial to those who died in the conflict, a concrete wall with bronze plaques on a grassy slope near the Stanley seafront.

"Its nice to come back here and see what we were fighting for," he said. "Personally, all 1 want is to see the problem solved and the islanders having a secure future."

fulness, Loiuion's opon-handediiess and a cooperative spirit among the ...mio servicemen stetioiied on the island since the war's end

The.troops .ire part ot Britain's costly Fortress falklands polic) Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher has resisted calls Tor nt\Y negi)tl;ihohsTvifhA    des'pite    the estimated

cost ol lioo million to 8(Hi million pounds S9(K) million to S1.2 billion a year to garrison the islands.

At the same time, Argentina has rebuffed Mrs, Thatcher's insistence that it acknowledge the end ot hostilities and sell-determination lor the uslanders, so the political situation IS stalemated The Argentines claim historical evidence shows the 1,'Jands lielong iothem.

Geriatric Facility Tackles Hearing Loss Problems

NEW 11V'!. '\KK, N Y

,\P ,\()prii\imatcly 90 percenf o! all nursing home patient> and :!o to ,')0 percent (It communii) iHMUing el-derl) ti.i\e xime lorm ol hearmu loss 'lei. according to the aiidioloaist at the Jew ish-liisiUiUia! I m / TwtEi c -(.'are. m.ii.) leople over ti.') live lor )ar^ Aith^-hearmg disonlers .md mther deny it "---H-    ibi-

prolilem

"I tind people with severe hearma dctieits who may ha\e lieeii livina tor decade-with the problem growing worse each \ear ' sa)s .Barbara l.ev\. head ot the , aural reiialah' Uon pnmram at the 'i27 tied voluntary, not-ioi'-proii: i.ieiuw m New llvdeP.irk

The purpo-e ol evaluating p.it'ei'il.' a' the center is to a " es 1 li e i r n e e d 1 o r ampiiiieaiion. to estimate the leileti! deri'.ed Irom a he.iniw .O'i an*! to determine th*' ')pe o; aid needed, she

.'u'cor'hnu to l)r. Michael .s I ! [I I e p, . .1 I (I ( S (itolar) nitobiUi't. ' .Many people iielawe lliat hearing O'" Is .1 natural part ot aumu Till' Is lU'i not so." he odds. expKiininu. why patients ma) reiect a hearing aid

iJemai is the bmgest# laeior mten patients have^ been livinu with 'he problem lor so long that the) are no! aware ot 'he loss Social stigma and the high cost of hearing aids stop those m n e e (l : r o m seeking amplification, ' notes the ear, nose and throat speeialis' who says only 30 percent ot those who need hearing aid.s actuall) have them

Normal verlial communication, understanding and e\en the abilil\ to speak

clearly are affected when hearing is impaired. .Mrs, Levy points out, .

' Amplification can improve hearing markedly." she says, "Consider that the hearing aid is similar to a public address system: there , rs a mic.>'op.hone 9r Jhe"rr.puf of a signal,-an amplifier to intensify the sound and a speaker to transmit the IfiUdei suiid    '

Yet, at JIGC, a hearing aid IS only one aspect of the rehabilitation process. Voice conservation, hearing aid training and orientation, .lip' and speech reading and counseling help compensate tor the loss apd,enable the patiti^nt to communicate moreeasilv.

The human ear. notes -Slippen. can distinguish some 4(K),(N)o sounds Hearing loss, which can occur in the inner, middle or outer ear. can cut the number of sounds heard dramatically. A hearing aid, he emphasizes, is not a replacement tor normal hearing

.Mrs Levy uses pure tones and verbal stimuli to test patients at the clinic Hearing thresholds and speech discrimination results help determine the status of patients' hearing.

Hearing disorders are dif ferent and require individualized treatment protocols The diagnostic workup also includes lab and medical tests, which will determine the final medical diagnosis of the auditory pathology, according to Slippen. A major problem in older adults, he explains, is wax buildup in the ear canal. Medication is given to soften the wax and allow for easy irrigation. Then, he says, patients return to the audiology clinic for rehabilitation.

Energy-Efficient Peof^e Different

STILLUATEK. Okla f.APi - People living in alternative hoiwng. ,>uch a,' earth-sheltered or solar homes, differ from conventional home dwellers, Phyllis .Marcus says.

For research toward a Ph D in home economics at Oklahoma State I'niversit) here, she evaluated innovativeness as a iactor jh adopting energy-etticient housing alternatives

Her .Mud) included 199 families in alternative housing and 98 in conventional homes, taking into account in measuring innovativeness perception ot an energy problem, leadership in the community, and information sources used when making major [lurcha.ses.

She lound people in alternative housing sought information from research journals. Extension personnel and books. Other tamilies relied on relatives, friends and neighbors for information

In both types ol housing, tamilies identified utility Companies, oil companies and political parties as sources of theenerg) problem

Those in energ) etiicienf housing feel their lives are less controlled by the energy problem than do persons living in conventionai housing, the study shows.

Ms. .Marcus found that alternative housing residents hold greater leadership roles in their communities and feel their contributions to the energy conservation movement are more in keeping with their beliefs and values than other families do.

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C Sunday, December 11.1983

Bradshaw Sparks ^feelers Past ~

New York, 34-7

NEW YORK (AP) - Terry Bradshaw, in his first appearance of the season, threw tw o touchdown passes before re-injuring his elbow in the second quarter and the Pittsburgh Steelers clinched a National Football League playoff berth with a 34-7 victory Saturday in the New York 3ets' last game at Shea Stadium.

Bradshaw hit scoring passes of 17 yards to rookie Gregg Garrity late in the first quarter and 10 yards to Cahm Sweeney 44 seconds into the second period. On the second one. he suffered bruises to his right forearm and the elbow which

was operated on last March. ^    .    _________________- ~

Brad^aw finisliied with completions on 5 of 8 passes for i yards. Cliff Stoudt. who had started Pittsburgh's first 14 games, took over and threw TI) passes of 13 yards to Bennie Cunningham in the third quarter and 18 yards to Sweeney in the fourth.

The victory snapped the Steelers' three-game losing streak, gave them a 10-5 record and assured them of no less than a wild-card playoff berth. They will clinch the American Conference's Central Division title if Cleveland loses Sunday in Houston or if thev beat the Browns next Sunday.

The loss, in the'Jets' farewell game in New York before next season's move to Giants Stadium in New Jersey, dropped them out of playoff contention w ith a 7-8 record and one game to plav. Their TD came on reserve quarterbhck Pat Ryan's 27^vard'pass to Johnny ' Lam " Jones in the third period.    /

Garrity's first scoring catch as a pro capped an eight-play. .77-yard drive 9:45 into the game, and the Steelers made it 14-0 on their next possession, marching 72 yards in nine plays.

After Stoudt took over 2:30 into the second quarter, the Steelers' offense cooled off for the rest of the half Pittsburgh took a 20-0 halftime lead on Gary Anderson's field goals of 29 and 40 yards.

The game, which drew a crowd of 53.996 there were 6.314 no-shows - left the Jets with a 70-70-3 overall home record, including playoffs, since they left the Polo Grounds and moved into Shea at the start of the 1964 season. It also w as the Jets' seventh loss without a victory or tie against Pittsburgh

since the teams began their serms_m 97^    -    ____

With less than three minteselo pTay.^d^nsive end Mark Gastineau of the Jets, the NFL's sack leader, got his 19th of tie season, downing Stoudt Gastineau. whose trademark is his arm-waving following each sack, gave one half-hearted swing, drawing more boos than cheers.

By then, more than half the fans had left the stadium. Some of those remaining were either engaged in fights or were attempting - sometimes successfully - to tear out seats, benches or portions of the auxiliary scoreboards.

At the game's end. hundreds of fans stormed onto the field, tearing up the turf. Dozens of police, many of them in helmets and riot garb, took the field but were unable to prevent the fans from storming and tearing down the goalposts Numerous fights between fans and po|ice erupted Bradshaw's second pass of the game and his first completion, a 24-yarder to Cunningham: got their first scoring drive started, and Frank Pollard's 22-yard run. kept it moving. Then, on third-and-iu. after two incompletions. Bradshaw sprinted a few steps to his right and fired to the wide-open Garrity in the middle of the end zone, between cornerback Jerry Holmes and safety Ken Schroy On the Steelers' next possession. Bradshaw and Pollard hooked lip on a Ir-'vard pass play 3T^u Fi ilCu ^lc^itl^ uuisi loi 18 yards before Bradshaw beat a blitz with a low bullet pass to Sweeney, who caught the ball at the 5 and stepped into the end zone

Richard Todd, the Jets' starting quarterback, tailed to get New York across midfield in the first hall He competed 11 ot 20 passes tor 114 yards and was intercepted twice and sacked three times before being replaced by R\an .rj minutes into the third quarter

Sfrock Fills In For Marino, , Tosses Two TDs For Miami

Carrying The Mail

Atlanta Falcons running back Williams Andrews (31) holds the ball tightly as he is hit by two Miami defenders during the first quarter of

play in the Orange Bowl Saturday. Defending on the play for the Dolphins is Glenn Blackwood (47) and Earnie Rhone (55). (AP Laserphoto)

MIAMI (AP) - Don Strock, filling in for the injured Dan Marino, fired two touchdown passes Saturday night to lead the playoff-bound Miami Dolphins to a 31-24 National Football League victory over the Atlanta Falcons.

Marino, his knee sprained in last weekends 24-17 triumph at Houston, watched and cheered from the sidelines as Strock led the Dolphins to four touchdowns, completing 18 of 23 passes for 229 yards.

Miami, the AFC East champion, boosted its record to 11-4 and improved its chances for a home-field advantage in its first playoff game. Atlanta fell to 6-9 with its second straight loss.

Atlanta quarterback Steve Bartkowski. the NFL's second-rated passer, came off a two-game layoff with a knee injury to hit 15 of 26 passes for 175 yards and a touchdowin to Floyd Hodge.

But Strock was the winner in the 19th start of his 10-year career in which he has served mainly as Miami's "relief pitcher." He threw scoring passes of 7 yards to tight end Joe Rose and 15 yards to halfback Tony Nathan.

The Falcons, trailing 17-3 at the half, pulled within a touchdown with Gerald Riggs' 2-vard run 4:27 into the second half.

But'scoring runs of 1 yard

by fullback Andra Franklin and 13 yards by halfback David Overstreet put the game out of reach.

Strock set up Franklins TD with a 22-yard strike to Duriel Harris on third-and-8, then hit wide receiver Mark Duper for 47 yards on the play before Overstreet's scoring run. '

Miamis Uwe von Schamann

answered Mick Luckhurst's 35-yard field goal with an 18-yarder later in the second quarter.

William Andrews, who" scored on a 24-yard run with 7:34 to play, ran for 161 yards on 21 carries, bringing Ids season total to a Falcons' record of 1,-409, breaking his own 1980 mark of 1,308.

Monarchs Streak Past VIVII For 82-65 Win

USSR Mystique' Fades Away

 /. 11 Dili in (incf rvrkni/\r]f T'rtonrt 1C .A t/\ Kotfln Kon

LEXINGTON. Va. (AP) -Old Dominion's Monarchs outscored Virginia Military 22-2 over a 9'2-minute span in the firsl half, Charlie Smith and Keith Thomas getting six points each, and coasted to an 82-65 basketball victory Saturday over the Keydets.

The ODU spurt broke a 6-6 tie with 15:04 left in the first half and gave the Monarchs, 4-1, a 28-8 lead with 5:30 remaining when Smith stole the ball and scored on a lyup.

Old Dominion led 38-19 at intermission by shooting 64.3 percent from the floor to 28.6 percent for the Keydets, 3-3, and built the margin as high as 54-29 before the Keydets cut the gap to 67-54 with 4:06 left in the game. The Monarchs then padded the margin at the foul line.

Mark Davis, a 6-foot-4

junior, led the Monarchs with a career-high 22 points. Thomas scored 16, Kenny Gattison 12 and Smith 1(). Gattison also had team-high seven rebounds.

OLUlMtMIMON (IU>

Wade 2-3 3-6 7. Gattison 4-5 4-6 12. DaMs 10-16 2-3 22. Smith 4-10 2-2 10. Thomas 6-11 4-4 16. Phillips 0-1 2-2 2. White 041 M 0. Umbert 2-8 1-2 5. Facka 04) 04) 0. Adkiip 1-1 04) 2. Hanlev 3-3 04) 6 Tolals 32-SD IK-2.K2.

VA.MILITARVi6.il Elmore 3-12 3-6 15. Sawyer 6-11 6-8 18. Herndon 2-2 04) 4. Huffman 3-8 4-5 10 Wins 6-13 00 12. looker 2-5 04) 4. McHugh 1-2 04) 2. Current 04) 0-0 0 TiHals 25-1)

'ilamime-Old Dominion 38. V;Air 19. Fouled out-Herndon Rebounds-Old Dominion 37 (Gattison 7i. VMI 21 'Sawyer 71 Assisls-Old Dominion 15 (Smith 5'. VMI 14 (Huffman 7i Total fouU-Old Dominion 21. VMI 21 A800.

We havent lost a passengei yet Of course, we haven't found very many, either. (756^088)

LAKE PLACID. N Y. i.AP' - Flag-waving fans still respond to the Soviet Select hockey team with the same patriotic chants of "L'-S-.A. I'-S-A," the way they did at the 1980Olvmpics.

Team USA. though, looks at the Soviet Nationals a little differently now.

The mvstique that surrounded the USSR players when the Americans stunned them 4-3 and then captured a gold medal with a 4-2 victory over Finland, seemed to be gone,

"We beat 'em. We know they're not a machine/' said defenseman Tom Hirsch following the Americans' 5-4 win over the Soviets Friday night. "1980 put a damper on it Actually, this Soviet team bares little resemblance to the one that "laved here in 1980 The Soviet squad, which kicked off a six-game series with the Americans, was chosen just four days prior to Friday's game and none were members of the 198(1 team.

" t)f ihe 2.) plavers who skaleil agdinsi Tctiu USA, eight are candidates for'the 1984 Olympic team and will be evaluated by the Soviet coaching staff.

'"We didn't know how strong they were without the top Russian team." said Scott Bjugstad. a Team USA forward, adding: "I think we can play with any team if we play our game "

Friday night's victory came as Phil Verchota. a member of the l98o'uiympic team! scored on a breakaway with 1: l8 left,

But in the first two periods. Team USA had to battle back from one-goal deficits twice.

U.S. Coach Lou Vairo cited early-game jitters as the culprit.

"I was hoping we wouldnt be down 5-0," he said.

Said Hirsch: "Once we felt that we got past the jitters, then we started doing anything:

Team USA took a 4-2 lead on scores 29 seconds apart by Bjugstad and Chris Chelios in the third period. But the Soviets fought back to tie the game as Anatoli Stapenischev and Mikhail Varnakov each scored. Thirty seconds later, team captain Verchota scored the winner.

Unlike some of his teammates. Chelios, 21. a defenseman from San Diego, think.s theres sti!! some mystique to the Soviets.

"Theyre a tough team. Those are the most exciting games. You can see the intensity in our eyes." he said.

Did Chelios sec the same emotion in his oppuneits' eyes'?

"I didnt look at them." he said.

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday Decem^erj 1 lyo U-"'

w

Hi

Puerto Rican Horse Breeder Transfers f rize-Winning Herd To S. Carolina

ENOREE, S.C. (AP) - No one smiles with recognition when Carmen Barreras signs a check at the grocery store in Woodruff. No one winks or whispers or ^ints. No one in Enoree knows who the woman is - unless they know Paso Fino horses.

Six months ago. Ms. Barreras left her native Puerto Rico, where she was a national celebrity as owner and breeder of the countrys finest and most beloved Paso Fino horses.

When she moved onto a 250-acre farm she bought in northern Laurens County, in upstate Soutlr CaroliniT. she brought22 other fine-gailed horses with her. including her unprecedented five-time grand champion mare. Promesa de Cupido.

To transport her unusual entourage.' which included a dozen dogs. Ms. Barreras used three boxcar-sized containers.

1 did not make (the Puerto Rican) people happy when I did that." said Ms. Barreras, who was educated and worked professionally in the States before moving back to her home country in the early 70s.

In Puerto Rico, the Paso Fino are a sport, a way of life, but mainly a show horse. .. People usedto comel'ronrall overto^ee these horses To give you an idea. I had one man come up to me after seeing Promesa de Cupido and say. Don't get me wrong, but no woman has made my blood

boil like your mare has.'

Some people think of horses as simply a method of locomotion. To others, horses are a thing of immense beauty. And then to others, we become enslaved by them."

Why did she move from enjoyable celebrity status to anonymity? It was a combination of things: The challenge of bringing wider recognition to a horse breed she loves in an area where Paso Finos are not well known, rising crime in Puerto Rico and a desire for increased independence.

am am extremely independent woman and in Puerto Rico, your family will not let you be." she said. Even my boyfriend, who seemed very willing to help me in getting things ready to move, all the time did not really think I would do it,"

She looked for a farm in the Southern states because a warm climate was essential for her horses.

I came here in Febrary and I moved in May." she said. Its beautiful - 250 acres and two ponds."

Educated at Cardinal Stritch College in Milwaukee and Briar Cliff College in Sioux City. Iowa. Ms. Barreras worked at a psychiatric clinic n1^wYoTlc^ffd7hmn^goraTirasterTMegreT^hT psychiatric social work in Milwaukee. She also woVked at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Tenn.

After logging several years im her field, she decided to return to her homeland. But without the big-city resources she'd grown accustomed to. .Ms Barreras found social work in Puerto Rico to be tedious and unchallenging protessionally.

So she turned to a childhood love - horses.

"I was crazy about horses even before I could walk." she said. ".My parents would say 1 would see an horse and flip '

Gradually she began to invest and raise Paso Finos, which move with essentially a broken, lateral pace -=-a fluid tour-beated gait that can be heard distinctly on a hard surface.

It-s delicate gait is the Paso Finn's distinguishing andmost valued characteristic

The horse's steps are small, rhythmic and rapid, eliminating the jarring effect of the diagonal pace of other breeds. The fine gait provides a smooth ride, the horse has almost no up-and-down, or bobbing, movement The Paso Fino is smaller than quarterhorses or thoroughbreds, typically to aliout 14 2 hands high and 7(H) to IlOO pounds They are strong in constitution and noble in carnage. Ms Barreras -said  --^^

Except tor one horse halt Colombian, the rest ot her Puerto Rican varietv

'uerto Kican and hall stat)le i> strictlv the

PASO FINO HORSES - A mare and her colt eye visitors from their stall on a farm near Enoree, S.C. The pair are of the Paso Fino breed, native to Perto Rico and known

for their unusual gait, (armen Barrera, a wikdely known Puerto Rican breeder, recently moved her prize-winning horses to South Carolina. (AP I.aserphoto)

South Georgia College

ion

By SCOTTSHEPARD Associated Press Writer

AMERICUS,Ga.(.AP)-A predominantly white college , in south Georgia is increasing its desegregation efforts despite official praise for having met its black student recruitment goals.

The reasons for the

.iin rinciiflrnn o inri

Otvppvvi

efforts are rooted in Georgia Southwestern College's traditional role of molding students with poor academic backgrounds into promising scholars.

Beyond that, however, there is a new competitiveness at the mid-sized college a furious drive to boost enrollments despite declining population growth.

But while GSWC has been successful in attracting black students to the campus, the college is finding it difficult to convince qualified black professionals to join its faculty.

'And both the administration and black student leaders agree that an increase in the number of black faculty members is vital to the continued success of the black student recruitment program.    ^

We need black role models in the classroom." said senior sociology major James Bernard Kynes, president of SABU. an organization of minority students at GSWC.

There's no problem with attracting black students to Georgia Southwestern." he added. "The problm is keeping them in school. It's hard to relate when you don't see any black faculty members."

GSWC President William H. Capitan meets frequently with black student leaders to discuss the problem.

"We need to get enough black professionals to make them feel at ease in the classroom." he said. "I've assured them we are going all out to get black professionals.'"

Capitan has given the same assurance to federal authorities who have ordered

iVio IncJiiTne aF cnrJrAzto (/%%

V..V    V/4

eliminated from Georgia's system of higher education.

A recent judicial review of dhegregatioir eirofis in Georgia observed that GSWC has virtually met its percentage goaf for black student enrollment."

Nearly 20 percent of its 2.344 students are black; its minority student body is, by percentage, the largest in the state. In 1966. less than 1 percent of its 1.505 students were black.

The judicial review board observed further, however, that only eight of GSWC's 129 professional positions are filled by blacks, although it noted that measures proposed by Capitan "should have a positive result."

In addition to basic affirmative action plans, the measures proposed by Capitan include sending notifications of faculty openings to professionals throughout the state's university system and beyond, and making in-person recruiting visits.

In the past our recruitment has been on a hit-or-miss basis." he said. "It didn't have any real teeth in it. .Now it's systematic. We've made it a part of our daily lives"

Capitan believes he can lure more black professionals to GSWC's campus despite the negative perceptions some may have of south Georgia and its racial histo

ry.

"I'm aware this is not the most attractive place for black professionals." he said. We have some interesting barriers to cross. There's a lot of change to come, but there's been a lot already."

But he believes the personal touch in recruitrig black professionals can overcome those problems in much the same way its helpeci in tne recruitment of black students.

"We've been meeting with black community leaders in an effort to define Georgia Southwestern's role as it relates to black students." he explained. Weve convinced them that black students won't be alone at Georgia Southwestern."

The college has also set up a scholarship fund for black students to ease the financial burden that college poses to some black families.

Capitan believes GSWC is a good choice for some black students because of its success with students who are' poorly prepared for college.

A lot of them come from poor academic, backgrounds." he said. But it's not a lack of ability. Its a lack of preparation. We've had tremendous success with these kind of students. It all depends on the level of aspiration."

He also believes GSWC isa good choice for the gifted student, black or white, because of its quality programs and congenial atmosphere.

We're small enough to talk to one another." he said. "And we have the kind of programs that will allow students to blossom."    i

Life As It's Lived

Byt.AlLMUHVELS

At some time or other all children question the double standard for adults and kids. They want to know why they can't dip snuff, chew tobacco, ride motorcycles and read trashy magazines. Naturally, we tell tham that such behavior in anyone under 16 is considered uncivilized.

Its harder to explain why they can't talk like us. Zachary simply cannot, or will not. understand that his grandfather's use of the word stinker" does not give the stinker the license to use it, too.

"You cannot call your grandaddy names." 1 keep telling him. It's disrespectful. "

What is disruspeckfull^" he asks sub-bornly.

It means that you're being sassy."

But you told me that stinker was a love name."

It is, when Grandaddy calls you a little stinker. It's sassy when you call him a big stinker.

1 get a blank statre. Can 1 call my cousin little Christopher thaf? "

"No. you cannot call anyone that."

"He called mea stinky" once"

"I cant help that. You are not to call other people names

Can I call him a tukkey buzzard? That's one of Grandaddy "s love names, too. "

No." 1 say. wishing that my family's language werent quite so colorful.

He stamps his foot. It's not fair! I can't say 'shut up or stupid or good words like that and now everyone can call me names that arent Zachary and I cant call them names that arent their names."

Oh hush," 1 sigh.

Don't you sass me. he says.

I went through this with Meg, too. She once called a friendly man in a supermarket check-out line a cute old buzzard. But she seemed to relinquish her use of such names a bit faster than Zachary. And now, true U) form, she has decide to help me in my efforts to clean up his vocabulary.

Why do you call people names?" she asked him a tW days ago.

"I dont know, dummy."

Zachary, 1 wont have it! 1 warned.

It's all right. Mommy." Meg said patiently. Let me handle this. You cant hurt me with words. Zachary, if that's what youre trying to do. and 1 want you to know that nice children do not call other people names except things like honey and sweet angel even if big leople do. Even if the names are not really )ad. children' do not like, to be called by anything but their given names. For instance, how would you like it if I called you Jeffrey all the time?"

Zachary, who had been listening to this lecture with a deadpan expression, drew back in his chair and grinned. Well, Rebecca. I dont think I would





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18(1-12)





^.^4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C. Sunday. Decemberll, 1983

In The State

'Shotput'Is Cannonball

FAYETTEVILLE - CA. -Pete" Sanders said at first he thought the round ball he found in a ditch was a shotput and that he figured he would give it to his grandson.

But he said later the thought crossed his mind that maybe the round hunk of metal looked more like a Civil War cannonball than a shotput,

T thought, God, it could be loaded, " said Sanders. Sanders called the police on Dec. 2 about the object, and a f'ort Bragg Explosives Ordinance Disposal team confirmed his suspicions

-Sanders tound the ball near a friend's home in Lexington and his friend's son had used the ball as a shotput for Sunday ^school activities, but the family wanted to get nd of the hunk ^ ot metal.

'T just brought it home and planned to give it to my grandson," Sanders said Sanders' cannonball is now kept m a safe place on Fort Bragg, The EOD team will eventually destnn it along with c,!her hazardous explosives it collects.

Fishing Boat Bums

Hr. \!> The 74-toot fishing boat Miss Diane burned and sank ''..ri'. .Saturday in the Atlantic Ocean a mile east of Kitty Haak on .North Carolina's Outer Bnks, the Coast Guard said All three crew members were rescued by another fishing vessel, according to the Coast Guard, and apparently were not hurt.

~ Therr-ideiTtifies were not immediately -nailable. A Coast-Guard uiilit\ boat was sent from the Oregon Inlet station

Marine Pilot Rescue

KITTY HAWK - A Marine pilot was rescued trom the Atlantic Ocean atter his plane went opt ol control and crashed about 77 miles northeast uif Elizabeth City, iccordmg to military otiicutls Major William F Bam parachuted into the ocean when his A\'k-v' Harrier jet went out of control Fridav atternoon. ofticials said He was picked up by a Coast Guard search and rescue helicopter about ,70 minutes alter the crash.

Bam, uho is stationed at Cherry Point .Marines Corps Air Station, sutiered only minor cuts and scratches, a .Marine Corps spokesman said. The plane was on a routine training missionuheni: crashed.

Military oiticials are investigating the crash, the spokesmansaul

Insurance Rates Changing

K.\LE1GH ,\ North Carolina Insurance Department actuar} ,sa\s the N (' Rate Bureau is planning to, cut surcharges tor drivers with insurance points while increasing rates tor sate drivers, in a news release irom InsuranceCommissioner .iohn, Ingram's othce. Robert Hunter siTd a tentative review tollouing a meeting ot the Board ot Governors ol the Rate Bureau indicates the bureau is trying to drum up support tor the idea

The proposal tollnws a consent order signed by Ingram last month denying increases proposed liy the automobile insurance industry, Ingram said then that the move saved motorists 111 North Carolina .S.78 million and that there would be no increase in rates in 1U(S4

Cone Mills To Close Plant

HlLL.sBoRitCGH - Cone Mills Corp uill close its Eno textile plant in llillsliorough early next year, laving ott alioiit .7.7(1 employees, atter the plant had losses ol about S7 million in tuoyears, oiticials said Layolls will being .Ian, Hi and will be completed by March 1. -aid Marcus Bradsher. plant manager, m a letter to. emplovees, ( one ollicials said the Eno plant made cordurov material until luxi, when it .-witched to other products tiecause ot a sharp decline in demand tor cordunp

Chancellor Will Resign

C11.\RKI. HILL Dr. Robert .Suderlmrg will resign ,\ug. :ll as chancellor ol the North Carolina .School ot the Arts in Winsjon-.saicm. I'mversit} ol North Ctirolina .Sy.-tem President William Frid;i\ hasannouced

-Mtdcrhtit'g.-diantellorior mne ytmrs-, took a year's leave ol jl-eiac m Ma\ to assess bis care(r and to devote urm'crrupied Miie tn hr- music. Friday said In a No\ 2:1 i>-'er I Friitav, .Miderburg said he pkinned to retire ' to piir-u "I'nmin'ores's Dr i.,iv.I'or.ce K Hat", retired dean ol the -chool ot music at! \i ' (trei-nsiiiiro. -.\as appointed last .Sejitember to serve a one year 'ei ni . as acting chancellor ot the school in Win-ton-Scileiii Fridav -aid no changes are planned at the .School at the.\r's

Duke Trustees Pledge $4 Million

DLHllAM .Memtiei's oi the Duke I nnersity Board ot Trustees have piefig'eii more than S4 million to the school's Capi'taLCampaign, boardChairman 1. Neil Williams has announced

The ( 'apitol Campaign, designed -to raise trom Sl.7o million to s'joo million tor the arts and sciences at Duke, has not otiicially begun So tar, S4n million has lieeii raised in )ltdges

Duke To Get New Center

DLRIIA.M - Duke Cniversity will have one ot two geriatric re-earch. education and clinical centers to be established m the .southeast by the Veterans .-Viministration. the VA announced this week \'.\ Administrator Harry N, Walters said centers at Duke and the Lniversity ot Florida in Gainesvilh' will lie activated during fiscal lbH4. which began Oct . 1 Each center IS to have a core statt ot about 12, including educators, researchers, clinicians and support personnel The Duke center will locus on cancm' causality and cardiovascular disease, while the (lamesville lacility will concentrate on pharmacology tor the elderly

Daniels Draws Prison Sentence For Bribery

W.ASHINGTON. N.C. (APi - Masceo E. Daniels, who claimed he was working with federal drug investigators, has been sentenced to five years in prison after his conviction on a charge of offering the Beaufort County sheriff a bribe.

A Beaufort County Superior Court jury deliberated about eight hours over three (lays before convicting Daniels Friday of offering Sheriff .Nelson L. Sheppard up to SlOO.tXiO to allow drug smuggling.

Daniels, 43. gave nofke of appeal, but Judge Thomas S. Watts of Elizabeth City denied a request tor release on bond pending appeal. Watts found that aggravating circumstances outweighed mitigating circumstances and imposed the maximum sentence.

The crime carries a two-year presumptive sentence, but Watts noted Daniels had three previous convictions, including one for breaking and entering. He said that outweighed

Daniels' honorable discharge from the military and the testimony of character witnesses.

In testimony. Daniels alleged that Hyde County Sheriff Roland W. Dale and District Attorney William C. Griffin Jr. were involved in illegal drug activities &nd that federal agents had asked for information about involvement by State Bureau of Investigation agent Lewis G. Young.

The prosecution presented secretly recorded conversations in which Daniels offered Sheppard money to "look the other way " on drug smuggling." Daniels testified he was encouraged to bribe the sheriff by federal drug investigators and that he had received a letter of immunity from prosecution.

Michael Grimes of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and J, Douglas McCullough. an assistant U.S. attorney who gave Daniels the letter of immunity, testified that they did not authorize a bribe attempt.

Judge Decries Dix Policies

RALEIGH. .N T. .AP) -Commitment policies lor adolescents at Dorothea Dix Hospital are "an aggravated assault on the conscience of everybody'' in North Carolina, the cliiet District Court judge tor U ake County says.

Judge George F Bason said he began analyzing the hospital's policies after 1,7-year-old .Michael Warren Forte hanged himself at the Wake Detention Center Nov.

2(). Forte had repeatedly threatened suicide and fried it t^ice, but had been denied admission at Dix and two other psychiatric facilities.

He's on my conscience." said Bason, who ordered Forte held tor psychiatric evaluation after the teenager knifed another student at a high school.

Bason said his .study of admission at Dix showed that the hospital's adolescent

treatment unit accepts primarily white' teen-agers referred b-y private psychiatrists, but provides little long-term care for severely emotionally disturbed and potentially violent youth.

According to the state , Department of Human Resources figures, all 23 patients in Dix's long-term care unit for adolescents as of last Tuesday were white.

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Oregon State Holds Off #5 Iowa For Upset

.CORVALLIS. Ore. (AP) -Newcomers Darrin Houston and Rick Berry propelled Oregon State to a 13-point lead Saturday and the 18th-ranked Beavers held on for a 53-48 college basketball victory over No. 5 Iowa.

The loss was the second in a rqw for the 3-2 Haweyes, who were drubbed 79-58 Wednesday night in Louisville.

Oregon State, 2-1, avenged a 56-^5 loss to Iowa in the title game of the Amana-Hawkeye Classic a week ago.

The Beavers, playing without three key players for the first six games due to NCAA rule violations, jumped to an 8-0 lead and never trailed.

(^egon State used a harassing pressure defense against the Hawkeyes. who had ball-handling trouble all game.

The Beavers built a 27-15 margin with 3':> minutes left in the first half and were up 30-21 at halftime.

Iowa cut the lead to five early in the second half, but

the outside shooting of Houston, a walk-on sophomore and Berry, a freshman, rebuilt the margin to 44-31 with seven minutes to go.

Andre Banks led a Hawkeye rally that cut the lead to 51-48 with 2:54 to play. But a ball control offense and free throws by Steve Woodside and Cljarlie Sitton preserved the Oregon State victory.

Houston, Berry and Woodside each scored 12 points for the Beavers, who used only six players the entire game. Sitton, who missed 10 minutes in the first half with foul trouble, added

11 points. Steve Carfino scored 13 and Michael Payne added

12 for Iowa.

a college basketball game.

It was Purdues biggest victory margin since 1910, when the Boilermakers beat Indiana State 112-6.

A run of 12 straight points early in the game helped the unbeaten Boilermakers to an 18-4 lead befbre Coach Gene Ready began substituting for

his starters.

Tampa, falling to 3-4 for the season, managed more than two straight points only one time in the first half when baskets by A1 Miller and Todd Linder cut an 18-point Purdue lead to 14 at 24-10.

But Clawson scored the next eight points for Purdue, in

cluding four straight free throws, and the Boilermakers added another 18-7 spurt for a 50-17 halftime lead. Miller, the Spartans leading scorer for the season with a 20-point average, had 12 in the first half and finished with 15 before turning an ankle as he fouled out midway through the

Cosell/Only Joking' About Leaving ABC

Purdue   106

Tampa.............50

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - Curt Clawson and Rickv Hall led a balanced attack with 16 points apiece Saturday as I9th-ranked Purdue, streaking to a 33-point halftime lead, crushed the University of Tampa 106-50 in

NEW YORK (AP) - Broadcaster Howard Cosell said Saturday he was only joking when he told a reporter that he was leaving ABC-TVs Monday Night Football telecasts after this season.

It was a put-on. Anyone in his right mind would have known it was a put-on, Cosell said. I was amazed that anyone took it seriously.

A copyright story in Mondays edition of "11 " "

Football News quotes Cosell as kying he was tired of working with "jocks and that he found the National Football League boring. Cosells Monday night colleagues include former football players Frank Gifford, Don

Meredith and O.J. Simpson.

A press release issued by the Detroit-based paper said Cosell made the comments to a reporter in Miami before a recent Monday night game. It also said the comments were made in the presence of CBS sports commentators Hank Stram and Jack Buck.

Contacted Saturday at ABC studios. Cosell said he was surprised to hear of the report.

If and when I decide to retire,Jhvill make the announcement in an appropriate and dignified manner and I will do it over the ABC facilities, he said.

No one answered the telephone Saturday afternoon at Football News offices.

final period.

Purdue, off to its best start in Ready's four years at the school, raised its record to 6-0.

Jim Rowinski added 13 wints for Purdue. Miller was )acked by the freshman Moses Sawney, who had all 12 of his points in the second half.

Tampa's first-half problems were compounded by 19 turnovers. 30 percent shooting from the field and a 22-12 Purdue advantage in rebounding.

In the second half, the Spartans came no closer than 29 points before Purdue again

steadily built its lead. A run of the two teams exchanged 14 in a row late in the game baskets the final three gave Purdue a 100-44 lead, and minutes

Don McGMoo INSURANCE

Hines Agency, Inc.

758-1177

Wolverines^ For Christmas!

WOLtfER

J.P. Davenport & Son

Highway 264 East 752-6930

Carolina east mall ^'greenville

/Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 10 p.m. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

Complete His Wardrobe with Quaiity Haggar" Sport Coats and Slacks!

A. Handsome Haggar^ Dacron/wool blend sport coats are styled with notched lapels, two-button front, two pockets and vented back. This traditionally styled sport coat is always the appropriate jacket to wear to the office, to dinner or to fooxbaii gamea. Drss it up with s.ac..s or weax i. wit you favorite jeans. 95.00

B. Men's corduroy slacks by Haggar are made with exclusive Cotton Plush finish, which is a blend of 50% cotton/50% Fortrel polyester. This blend insures soft cotton comfort,with easy-care durability. Slacks are styled with belt loops and front slash pockets in handsome solids. 28.00

Haggar365^Slacks That Perform Great Every Day of the Year!

C. Sansabelt slacks of Dacron polyester feature the durable Expand-O-Matic stretch waistband. These Haggar slacks are machine washable and dryable with Scotch-Release fabric treatment for stain resistance. They retain their tailored shape by resisting wrinkles. 28.00

Our new Magic Stretch 2 stretch waistband in Haggar 365 belt loop slacks.

D. Attractive belt loop woven polyester Haggar slacks feature Magic Stretch 2'^stretch waistband, Scotch-Release treatment for stain resistance, soil release and breathability and best of all, an unconditional money-back guarantee. 26.00

rWRPlN Wopman! Scotch-Release'

ml/    N    V    .    -    :s'Pi trom3M themakefot SCOtChgafd

'/[I'/y Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 10 p. ^ Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-235

Phone

(756-2355)





The Daily Retlector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Oil

Autos For Sale

NEED A CAR? Rent dependable used cars at low rates. Phone RENT A WREC(ejS2-2277

SELL    "the National

Autof lnde< J-Way ! Authorized

Dealer in Pitt County. Ford CalJ 758 0114.

Hastings

012

AMC

1976 MATADOR WAGON. Extra clean, drives perfect. Must sell! $1,075 or make otter 752 8154 or 757 3188

013

Buick

BUICK CENTURY LIMITED 83

Demo 4 door Loaded! Low Mile age Duke Buick Pontiac. Farmville 753 3140

BUICK 83. LeSabre Limited 4 door Lease Cars i2) Loaded! Low Mile age Duke Buick Pontiac Farmville 753 3140

021

Oldsmobile

1977 CUTLASS SALON, Black WTTh buckskin vinyl interior, buckets and console. Tilf^ cruise, AM FM stereo. Factory rally wheels on new Firestone SS white letter radials. $2995. 827 2313. Dealer Number 963

1979 OLDSMOBILE. excellent con ditlon, diesel, power steering, power brakes, tape deck, $2890 756 7297.

1980 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS, 4

door, V6, vinyl top, 34,000 miles, excellent condition $5,000. 758 4491

022

Plymouth

1 978 PLYMOUTH Volare 6 cylinder Good Condition 757 0440

023

Pontiac

1973 BUICK CENTURY, Air condi tioning, 8 track tape, clean $1,200 Phone 752 6878

1976 REGAL. 67 000 miles, white with red landau top and interior Tilt power steering and brakes, air. AM FM stereo tactory chrome wheels on Michelin steel belted radials $2995    827 2313 Dealer

Number 93

1977 SKYHAWK, low mileage, air power stereo, new tires, motor needs little work $1600 1050

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! 1981 Grand Prix AM FM, cruise, extras, low mileage $7 200 Anne Mbnday through Friday 752 6889

GRAND LE MANS SAFARI Wagon 1981 Beige with woodgrain, V 6, automatic, air, wire wheel covers. 946 6424

STE 6,000 Loaded mileage Still under Phone 756 7683

Very low warranty!

1976 PONTIAC Grand Prix SJ, new tires, tully loaded Excellent condi tion $2295 Mike 752 7173 betore 5; alter 5. 752 4491

, ,,    1978    GRAND    PRIX.    $3,495    Phone

Lall 752 j 355 6388

1980 CENTURY LIMITED, loaded 9vith options excellent condition, tow mileage 758 3175 or 756 3109.

1978 PONTIAC

cash 758 1355

Catalina $1,645

1983 BUICK REGAL, good condi tion 14,000 miles. Call 752 331 1 up to 5 00 after 5 00. 752 6554

1979 PONTIAC SUNBIRD. 40,000 actual miles, 4 speed Asking $2,600 756 4836 or 758 0237 alter 8pm

024

Foreign

014

Cadillac

SEVILLE. 1978. 4 door, white blu^ feather tuM power, wire wheel covers, very nice 946 6424

1975 COUPE DE VILLE Excellent condition 86 000 miles. S2.695 Will trade, Phor* 756 4553

1979 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille in good condition Priced to sell Call 757 44C

015

Chevrolet

CASH FOR your car Barv Sales 756 7765

MONTE CARL 1977. Landau 2 poor black very clean good tires J46 7798

W9 CAMARO Rally Sport Blue nd white, 307 V8 Very quick

-----%t950    May    'be    seen    atdimmy-

Philtip Sor call 756 5058 atfer 5

MGB 1969. $1300 756 1025

fWOTA CELICA ST. 1980 ^"doo dark brown, 5 speed. AM FM stereo air 946 6424 VOLVO GLE. 1980. 4 door dark green metallic automatic AM FM stereo leather, .sunroof alloys, power windows cruise 946 7798

1972 MONTE CARLO Completely reconditioned, dove gray Burgundy fop and black interior Buckets pulomatic, power steering and brakes air AM .FM stereo, factory rally wheels $2195 827 2313 Dealer Number 963

1973 MONTE CARLO LaTcTa_ loaded Well taken care of. Call 825 2831 alter 6pm

WE BUY AND SELL Used Cars Joe Pecheles Volkswagen 756 1135 203 Greenville Blvd Greenville N C

9M DATSUN 260 Z, 4

Excellent condition, silver. Key stone spokes. Sir stereo cassette 756 5185 9 to 5 Monday through Friday, 757 9130 5 to 10 Monday through Friday

1975 OATSUN Stationwagon Loolis good, runs good, good tires $1895 _Caill58 4096 1975 HONDA CIVIC good condiliom $1895 Call 756 6943

034 Campers For Sale

CAMPER - Panel, cabinets, roll out windows Fits ' j ton Pickup. Phone 746 2473.

PROWLER, ir. Extra clean, air conditioning and bath. $2.400. Call 355 6780 after 6 p.m

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774.

1976 2S' COACHMAN Bunk House Travel Trailer Sleeps 9. Excellent condition $5,300 firm Call anytime Sundays weekdays after 4:30 p.m . 756 2697

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA EXPRESS MOPED, 1979 model Completely rebuilt $200 7^ 2208

YAMAHA GT SO cycle Low mile age Excellent condition! Call 753 5466, Farmville

1978 MODEL, 750 Hondamatie, real good shape. 2 helmets, 2 new tires, cruise control and other extras. $900 756 9163

1979 (BOUGHT NEW in 1980) YZ80, like new, only had occasional use $375 firm 753 2655 after 6 prn

1980 YAMAHA 650 Special New tires, full windshield Excellent condition $1.200 752 3677

1983 SUZUKI 450. Automatic shaft drive, 3000 miles, luggage rack, 3 helmets $1800 Call 758 1558.

046

PETS

FREE BEAUTIFUL KITTENS to

good home 756 8324 after 6 or anytime weekends.

PITT BULL DOGS, 3 months old. $50. Call 758 3029

QUALITY PUPPIES Chows', Siberian Huskies. Basset Hounds. Poodles, Miniature Schnauzers, Lhasa Apsos, Shih Tzus, Eskimo Spitz Metro Lind Kennels, Highway 24, AAorehead City, 1 726-7798.

051

Help Wanted

ACCOUNTANT. College degree with 2 to 3 years of experience will land you this position in public accounting $18K to S25K Fee paid Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snell ing Personnel Service

ACCOUNTING MANAGER.

Position, available with local AM/FM radio station Accounting degree required Responsibilities include: payroll, accounts receiv able, general ledger, financial statements, budgeting, special projects, accounts analyst and supervision Send resume, complete with salary history in confidence to: WNCT Radio, PO Box 7167, Greenville, NC 27834 WNCT is An Equal Opportunity Employer

1983 V45 SABRE HONDA, excellent condition Negotiable 6 months old

758 5823

039

Trucks For Sale

BLAZER CHEYENNE. 1978. 4 X 4_

Light blue and white. 59,000 mTles, air tilt wheel, AM FM stereo, rally wheels 946 6424.

GMC HIGH SIERRA. 1977 4 X 4 Short wheel base, gray, V 8, automatic air tilt wheel, sliding rear window, rally wheels, while letter all terrain tires, front bumper with winch and rod holders Very nice 946 6424

JEEP WAGONEER. 1978 Gray with woodgrain, V 8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, till wheel cruise, alloy wheels 946 6424

JEEP WAGONEER. 1978 4 X4

Red V 8 automatic, air, tilt wheel, cruise, cassette, very clean 946 7798

OWNER MUST SELL, 1968 Chevy Pickup Looks good runs good Phone 753 3902

1967 FORD TRUCK. Good shape $750 firm Phone 756 7381

1976 BMW 2002 air, AM FM cassette deck $4950 758 2703

1976 HONDA ACCORD air rebuilt engine, AM FM cassette deck $2500 758 2703

DATSUN BilO. Man-trtH-transmission, AM FM air condi tioning. good transportation good tires Assume loan 756 3542

1975 CHEVROLET Malibu One -Owner-, air-conditioned- S1800-Cail 756 0574

1977 TOYOTA COROLLA AM FM

cassette, new Michelm radials, excellent condition $2500 neqotia 1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU, | ble 757 1936

67 OOU miies White with buckski

1976 FORD PICKUP. 1 owner, automatic transmission, AM.'FM stereo radio Clean and in real good condition $1,895 negotiable Phone 758 1603

1980 LUV TRUCK, long body, AM FM radio, 38,(X miles, $3900 756 0148

1981 DATSUN, 5 speed, air, step bumper, longbed, $3650 Call 756

2750 or I 946 0363.

top and inter tonsole Til Irac k po.ve locks Rear

Swivel buckets and AM FM stereo 8 windows and door ndow defoqqer Fac

1978 TOYOTA Celica GTLB 5 speed, aiT, stereo, low miles $4,400 Phone 752 7703

1978 VOLKSWAGET DASHER

1981 LONG BED Toyota SR5, loaded excellent condition $5500 Call 746 3530 or 746 6146

1982 TOYOTA, AM FM, 5 speed, 17.000 miles, excellent condition Call 746 4014 or 746 2372

AM FM aulomal transmission, hatchback $2,300 or best oHer 756 5285

fory rally whet-ls on steel belted' Champaign Edition with sunroof, radials $2295    827    2313 Dealer'

Number 963

976 CAMARO Rally 'Sport JVrecki'd but runs Best otter i 258 78i6eveninqs

1976 CHEVTTE, motor completely Tebuilt new clutch Good running ihape. .rnd looks good $1950 1ieqrjlra0tC'-'*S8 225T'    

1983 TOYOTA TRUCK. Low mile age Excellent condition Call 758 2947 after 6pm

1979 280ZX, Grand Luxury Package. 2 tone Excellent condition' Call Jack 752 1907 or 756 8362 Serious inquiries only

040

Child Care

9977 CHEVROLET IMPALA new

bamt vinyl root excellent condi tio.n $2 500 Call 7.16 2179

1980 MAZDA RX 7 Anniversary Edition -Ail options New vadials, Alpine cassette Excellent condi tion $6,900 negotiable Call 756 0218 after 12 noon

ToV-, xxvsiutE r-ADi r. ,    ----6    '80 VOLKSWAGEN Rabbit pickup

4977 MONTE CARITO 1 owner Rh;]' (or sale Call 919 946 9285

- -good ^-ondvLsflEuJLy-. <qu .pped 4

RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care I (or 2 intants in my home Begins ! Janoary 3. 198-1 7 30am 5 30pm,

I Monday Friday Experience, own I transpnrtation, references Call I 758 8570 between 4 and 7pm only

I someone to KEEP 2 year old in their home or mine Greenville ' area -H'oors Monday-tiorn 12 45 to

$1 495 neqotuit)le Phone 758 1601    ,    \9S\    __HONDA^ ACCORi 9 p m , Wednesday from 8 to 6 p m

'    ""        I Thursday from 12 45 to 9 pm.

1 Friday from 8 to 5 p m I 825 0968 I after 6pm

J978 CAMARO type LT Brand new 250 engine installed Body m good condition AAA FAA Craiq Auto Re ' C-."    stf*r(.0 system iind sputikers i

%3 '.ao' .58 6754 Jett    ,

J978 CHEVROLET CAPRICE I pwn,- ai: power $J200 '52 1 729

1979 CHEVY MONZA. 4c7hnd(4 tSuton-.anc transmission Very de endabie can $2 600 negotiable Phon.. s2-; .13!'    '

1979 CHEVETTE 4 door ' AAA' F.AA tad G ,ery c'ean low mileage For i Imbr, inform,ition days 758 0696 | Ji". s6 .: '80

AM FM cassette, air 752 9788

030

Bicycles For Sale

ASSEMBLER Grady White Boats has an immediate opening. Expert ence required in carpet installation and power tool useage Must be able to work with heavy fiberglass parts If interested, apply in person at the Personnel Office Monday through Friday, 8a m. to4p.m

AVON CAN MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS MERRIER!

Be an Avon Representative in your -netghborhood, earrr-money-and-wirt-valuable gifts, too!

Call 752 7006 .

CABLE INSTALLER, experience preterred, but will train Apply in person only to Greenville Cable TV, 517 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville, NC EOE

CASHIER Experience please! Apply in person only at Sav A Ton, 612 West Greenville Boulevard No phone calls!

DON'T ENVY SUCCESS ATTAIN

IT! Managers needed for growing and expanding company Only achievers need apply Excellent opportunity Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel.

DRIVERS NEEDED. Must be over 18 Part time and full time. 13.35 per hour plus commission Must have own car AppI/'at Alano s Pizza. l403Oicklnson Avenue

EMPLOYMENT CONSULTANT. It

you have the jnaturify, the outgoing personality, and the business expe rience to handle the public, we will tram you in one of America's fastest growing service professions We offer outstanding earnings potential, comprehensive training and- 8 -protessiunai fattsrness environment. For a personal in terview call Jamie or Judy 355 2020, Heritage Personnel Service

EXPERIENCED OR CEHTtFlED

Dental Assistant for growing practice Excellent benefits. Send resume to Dental Assistant, PO Box

1967. Greenville, NC 27834

EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER

for small office 3 to 5 hours per month with set salary. Great extra job for extra cash Call 752 7338 and leave message.

FLAT PATTERN DESIGNER.

Must have degree in home econom ics with concentration in clothing. If you want a career arid not just a job this is for you Call Ted. 758 0541, Snelling 8, Snelling Personnel.

FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISOR.

Must have experience in tood man agement with a hospital or nursing home facility Good administrative skills required $I8K up Fee paid. Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snell ing Personnel Services

HEATING AND AIR Condiiicming Service Personnel wanted At least 1 year ol experience required Call 756 4624 or apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors

TWO GIRLS 26'    10    speed    bikes

Likenew $50each 757 0634

20" GIRLS BlKEraiiTi'osTnew $50 Training wheels, $5 Call 758 4163 alter 5pm

! 046

PETS

AKC DOBERMAN PUPPIES 2

females, $100 Call 746 4055

032

Boats For Sale

AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD

puppies 6 weeks old the 20th of I December Black and black and brown $75 758 4669 or 752 3735

ALBERG 37 SAILBOAT Beautiful tully equipped yawl with many extras 752 Ii29after6

AKC GOLDEN Retriever pups Shots ahd wormed Will be ready Christmas week 795 3549

116

Chrysler

1978

V-.-.

CORDOBA. Po.-.c-r Aindows ' .1 ' . ruist- 70 000 mili-s

1 ('i-ctn pertcct '

- P' c- n.-qo'.,iblo 732 B'Si

D17

Dodge

973 DODGE

%ng out 17.16 2326

4 door Clf-an inside !;ri.-, Runs good Call

i)18

Ford

1.TD COUNTRY SOUIRE, Wagon | '1979 4 door L-qhi blue with ,vood ' tqrain t.it .-,heei cruise power; V/indo.-.'. po.-,er door lor ks AMFM, 'stereo air condition dual tat mg /ear s-ats 946 7 798

THUNDERBIRD, 1978'Toaded landau Great shape $2900 Call 746 2598 or '46 6790 8 to 5 30    i

Runs good $575 Phone

x1977 LTD .752 8

J977 MUSTANG 'automatic, fully | /quipp'-d 63,000 miles, new tires,; ^xcellen' -ondilion, $2250 neqotia ' J5le 7s?    '05

;r979 FORD FE'ST $1900 ' Call I 752 7483 before 5pm    

f9ll FORD escort" wTth'air, ! 'automatic excellent condition Call 756 6678

DISCOUNT BOATING Accessories Ghnslmas Specials'' 6 gallon plastic tupi lank $19 95, Hum rmnqbird Super 60    $1 18 88 Hass

Seals starting at $12 95 Flush attachments $6 88 Zebco Rod Reel and Baits $9 95 Adult Ski Vest $19 .19 Uniden Deptli Finder $99 95 Entire Inventory Reduced We ship'' Marine Salvage Distributors 145 Cokey Road Rocky Mouni NC 27801 '9191442 804!

WESTERLY 26 DIESEL powered fiberglass cruising sailboat The best buy around at $14 500 752 1 129 after 6

14' BANDlf Fiberglass Sail boat with trailer Sails included $800 Phone 756 5339

1978 '80 "h0R S'E row E R MercT^rV Trim and Tilt $1.350 1978 Glasstron with 175 Black Max Cox trailer $5,100 Gall 757 3636

Top quality, fuel economical cais can be found at low prices in Classified

AKC REGISTERED German Shep herd puppies (ust been weened -Will hold III Christmas 752 2540 or 752 31 70

AKC REGISTERED GERMAN

Shepherds $75 each Call 756 0700 after 6pm

AKC Registered Champion bloodline Norwegian pups. Ready torChristmas 524 5436 after 5 30.

AKC SIBERIAN HUSKYS, 6 weeks old. black, gray male and female $100 Call 753 2731 after 3 30p m

CHRISTMAS SIBERIAN HUSKY

puppies AKC Registered, black and white 753 2081

FDR SALE:    AKC Pekingese,

Dachshunds, Pomeranians I male Chihuahua and Cocker Spaniels Clipping and grooming for all breeds Call 758 2681

FDR SALE; Full blooded Border Collie Pum>ies, 7 weeks old De wormc Call Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

$9,200 4 DODR, loaded 1982 Escort Wagon aulom,itif $5.700 Phone '58 6582 .

021

Oldsmobile

1967 DLDS 442 tias new engine, 52,000 miles on . the body needs paint $2500 negotiable Call 752 6239

1976 CUSTOM CRUISER. 9"^assen qer fully loaded NADA $1 650 Ask.nqSI 250 752 8I5-1

1976 CUTLASS Salon T top black with wine interior cruise. AM FM stereo factory rally wheels, white letter radials $2995    827    2313

Dealer Number 963

f977 CUTTaSS olds, FullyToaded Low mileage $1.850 Phone 756 9602

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company has a Systems 34 (96Ki computer available for im-mediate time sharing 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer is available tor immediate temple hook up using telephone communications Programs ready for general business use include general ledger accounts receivable invenlorytbilling accounts payabib and payroll Contact: President P O Bo* 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

1983 Ford LTD

per month

Selling price of $6470.00. $850 Down payment. Cash or Trade with approved credit. 48 payments at $158,77 APR 13.5%. Life insurance included. Total amount linanced $5863.87. Total note due $7620.96, Plus NC Sales Tax and License.

Carolina East Sales

264 Bypass & Hooker Road Greenville N.C.

Owned and Operated by Dallas Tripp & Rickie Moore

Heritage Personnel Service

CIVIL ENGINEER needed imme diately, excellent salary and benefits

COMPUTER TECHNICIAN

Techtilcal ability plus flair for dealing with people

SALES. Expanding North Carolina firm looking for Greenville reps. Excellent commission structure No expensive travel

WORD PROCESSOR for the expe rienced person looking for position with local established organization

Call Jamie, 355-2020

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR

SCREENS & DOORS

C.l. Lupton Co.

7 52 t> I I (>

NO DOWN PAYMENT

77 Ford    $85    per    month

79 Dodge Van (24) $119 per month 32 Olds Cutlass (30) $215 per month

78 Chev, Malibu (18) $137 per month 79FordT-Bird (24) $150 per month 74 Ford F-600 Truck (24)    $20C

With approved credit Based upon an open end lease Residual values may vary according to mileage $100 security deposit required

Daily Rentals Also

WE TAKE TRADE INS

MID-EASTERN LEASING CO.

inpittple? 756-4254

COUPON

SUBARU

Special Of The Month

(Offer good thru December 31,1983)

OIL CHANGE

Includes 5 qts. 10/40 oil Oil filter & labor

13

99

TUNE-UP-ELECTRONIC ENGINE

4 cylinder..............51^9

6 cylinder  .......^25

8 cylinder........ ^32

'Sld Ignition Extra!

FREE WINTER CHECKUP WITH ANY SERVICE '

Clip And Bring This Coupon for Your Service Special

All Subaru Accessories in Stock 10%

Off With This Coupon

Subaru Of Greenville

60S W Greenville Blvd.    Greenville

Authorized Parts & Service Phone 7S6-888S

COUP

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JOHNSENS ANTIQUES & LAMP SHOP

SELECTION OF SMALL ANTIQUES

LAMPS-GLASS SHADES & CHIMNEYS

HANDMADE FABRIC SHADES

OLD LAMPS REPAIRED AND REWIRED

NEW LOCATION

758-4839

315E. 11THST. GREENVILLE

051

Help Wanted

HOUSEKEEPING SUPERVISOR

Full time position created by in ternal promotion now available at Lenoir Memorial Hospital Must have supervisory experience. Floor care experience desirable. Clinical perception required in completing

daily reports and records. Com petitive salary and comprehensive benefits package. Contact Personnel Department, Lenoir Memorial Hospital, P O. Drawer 1678, Kinston. NC 28501 or call 919 522 7385

HOUSEPARENTS FOR group home for emotionally disturbed children aged 4 12 years. Live in rent free, weekends off. Experience working with children preferred Send resume to Houseparents, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

TYPISTS Owpm BOOKKEEPERS ACCOUNTINGCLERKS DATA ENTRY OPERATORS Please call for an appointmenf

Anne's Temporaries Inc

120READE STREET

758-6610

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

Electronic technician (Service) $13 16K

Electrical technician installer $12-15K

Mortgage Loan Officer $14 20K Word Processer $9 )3K Switchboard Operator/Receptionist $8 UK

Accounting/payroll clerk CompuferOperatorSfO I3K R8iR Transmission Specialist $18 20K

Medical Secretary' Bookkeeper $10 12K

Secretary'Receptionistf $10 12K

Service dispatcher/accounting clerk

A R Collectionsclerk (Part time)

Some fees negotiable CALL TO DAY Recorded message will pro vide additional information

J-Woolard Employment Consultants (Personnel Service Division)

302 Evans Street Mall Greenville. NC 757 3398

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

To Buy Or Sell A Business In Coafideiice

contact t Harold Creoch

The MarkeCplace, Ire.

2723E. 10th St. 752-3666

051

Help Wanted

INTERIOR DECORATOR/Sales

Person. Experience preferred. Sal ary plus commission. Send resume -wFfh-reference* fo Interiof Decae tor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835

JOB FOREMAN 2 positions available for experienced men 1i Experience in Industrial Construe tion, most know layout, lootings, masonry, and concrete work, Wilson area. 2) Experience in Apartment and Condominium con struction. must know layout, foot ings, and concrete work and have ability to over see the total job. Greenville area. Good pay, benefits, and security for the right individu al Send resume to Samet Con struction Co., PO Box 3957, Wilson, NC 27893.

LINEMEN - Power line experience and helpers. Work in Virginia Call 1 946 8164

LPNS NEEDEG. Part time and full time. 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available Apply in person or call Oak Manor, Inc , Snow Hill, I 747 2868

LPNS NEEDED full time and part lime, all shifts. Good benefits, competefive salary Call Britthaven of Kinston from 9 a m to 4 pm, 1 523 0082 for interview.

MANAGER TRAINEE Are you

energetic, assertive, and ready for success? Let us put you in your place with the expanding company Call Ted. 758 0541, Snelling 8. Snell ing Personnel Service

MANAGER TRAINEE. Start the New Year with a new career Large corporation expanding and needs additional management personnel Training provided Must enjoy working with the public and be goal oriented. Excellent benefits Call Judy. 355 2020, Heritage Personnel Service

MECHANIC WANTED Ford Lincoln Mercury Experience Must have own tools Excellent pay and company benefits Apply to Buck Sutton, East Carolina Lincoln Mer cury Dickinson Avenue, Greenville

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

T

rrrrmi

We will strip straight chairs

For

g EACH Revolutionary new method! Completely safe for tine furniture, metal, wicker, etc. Call for our low prices of other Items.

752-1009

STRIP-EASE OF GREENVILLE

628 South Pitt St.

East Carolina Auction & Reaity Co.

Specializing In

PUBLIC AUCTION AND PRIVATE SALE OF FARM LAND AND FARM EQUIPMENT

Let us help you get the lop dollar lor anything you wish to convert to cash Located 2 miles North ol Grilton, N C.. Hanrahan XRd. N.C. 11 Bypass

CONTACT MILTON garrs

NC Broker 34924    746-3883    Day    524-5664    Nile

INCOME^PROPERTY _

Average $1600 per month for 8 years. Ideal for absentee owner.

4600 SQ. FT. MASONRY BUILDING IN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA

Very secure lease with AAA Southeast company.

THE RICH COMPANY

919-946-8021    Nights, 919-946-6829

Salesman Of The Month

Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevrolet is pleased to announce that Clyn Barber is the winner of the Salesman of The Month Award. Clyn won this for his outstanding sales performance during the month of November.

PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle

756-2150

USED CARS

1983 Mustang Convertible - 8,000 miles, automatic, power steering, a/c, tilt, cruise, stereo.

1983 Ford Fairmont - 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c. 1983 Ford LTD Brougham - 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c, tilt, cruise, povi/er windows, power seats, 36 months, 36,000 mile warranty.    '

1983 Ford Thunderbird automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c, low miles.

1981 Buick Century - 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, AM/FM stereo, wire wheel covers.

1980 Cutlass - 2 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c, V-6.

This Weeks Special 1979 Cutlass Brougham SW - Diesel, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning. NADA Retail $3725.00 Hastings Special: $2650.00

BUDGET CORNER

1983 Honda 250 Motorcycle -.....  $995.00

1977 Maverick - 37,000 actual miles, automatic, power steering, a/c.. $1495.00

1972 Chevrolet Camaro - automatic, power steering, a/c...........$1900.00

1966 Comet - 57,000 actual miles, automatic, a/c, power steering $1250.00

H

ASTIMG

FORD

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass

Dealer No. 5720

758-0114

S

Greenville. N.^ 27834

051

Help Wanted

MEDICAL SECRETARY, buper opportunity for perton 'with above average skills. SlOK to S14K. Call Ted, .758 0541. SnellJng & SneJliog. Personnel Service.

NEED CASH for Christmas? Address and stuff envelopes. Only people with nice hand riling need apply. Call 756 0285

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

051

Mdp Wanted

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST or

equivalent to work part time on weekends. Weekends include call time. Please send resume or call Frances Respass, Laboratory Man aoer, Chowan Hospital Inc., P. D Box 62, Edenton, NC 27932 919 482 8451. EOE

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NEONATOLOGY RESEARCH NURSE

needed with NICU experience to work with neonatologists on clinical research projects in the medical school. Must work with physicians, nurses, patients and parents of patients. Will be responsible in collecting data and precise record keeping. Requires a graduate from a State accredited School of Nursing and . . . license to practice as a registered nurse in North Carolina by the North Carolina Board of Nursing.

Submit detailed resume to: PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

East Carolina

TTfilifAFaltiy ________

GREENVILLE,

NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352

ECU

AUCTION

230 ACRES FARMLAI^D Saturday, January 21 10:00 A.M.

Location: ' 4 mile north of Grifton, N.C.. Take State Road 1110 east at Hanrahan X-Roads, go 2 rniies^ turn right on State Road 1907. Go 14 mile. Property on both sides of road.

This property wilj be sold in several tracts. Farm tract consisting of 125 acres total. Approximately 90 acres cleared, 16,000 lbs. tobacco allotment. Balance to be sold In separate tracts ranging from 2 acres to 25 acres in size. Small tracts have excellent development potential.

1 H(

Sale Conducted By

EAST CAROLINA AUCTION CO.

I N A ^ Contact

till Rtchland* RO. KIntton N C LtCWIM No M

Watch For Further Details To Follow Milton Garris 746-3883 Days, 524-5664 Nights W.B. Taylor 527-1106 Days. 523-9649 Nights

DON WHITEHURST

Best Quality Pre-Owned Automobiles in Eastern North Carolina

1983 Buick Electra Limited - Four In Stock. Loaded with all power options, Save on these hard to find Luxury cars!

1983 Buick LeSabre Limited - Power windows, power door locks, power seats, Dark brown exterior, only

18.000 miles.

1983 Buick Regal - 4 door, Dark Jadestone with Light Jadestone top, power door locks, cruise, tilt, only

15.000 miles.

1983 Buick Riviera - Dark Burgundy with Burgundy leather interior, loaded with every option available. Like New!

1983 Buick LeSabre Custom Power windows, power door locks, cruise, tilt, Two in Stock.

1983 Datsun 280ZX -16,000 miles. T-top, Must See To Appreciate!

1982 Buick Electra Limited Loaded, low miles, White with Dark Blue interior,

1982 Buick Riviera - Has all options available. Gray with Dark Blue top.

1982 Chrysler LeBaron - Gold with Dark Blue top. Immaculate condition. Has all power options.

1982 Buick LeSabre - Low miles, Excellent condition, cruise, tilt, plus much more.

1982 Buick Estate Wagon - Loaded, low miles. Dove Gray with woodgrain siding.

1982 Buick Century Cruise, tilt, Wire wheel covers, V-6engine.

1981 Olds Cutlass - 4 door, one owner, Excellent condition, Light Blue exterior.

1981 Pontiac Phoenix - 4 door, one owner, low miles. Great Economy car. <

1981 Buick Skylark - On# owner, low miles, automatic, air, Real Sharp!

1981 Buick Electra Limited - Charcoal exterior, Loaded with everything!

1981 Ford Escort Wagon - Low miles, air, 5 speed, Plus Much More!

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix - One owner, low miles. New Tires.

1983 Dodge Pick-up - Low miles, automatic, 6 cylinder, air, Short Bed.

1983 GMC S-15 - 4x4, One Owner, only 14,000 miles.

DON WHITEHURST

PontiaCBuick-GMC ^ Chrysler-Dodge-Plymouth

Tarboro, N.C.

823-6156

i





Q.0 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C. Sunday, December 11.1983

Siblings Dodge Odds In Beating Rare Skin Disease

  _ii 1 ___uikan    uniira    a    lri/1    thotc    oil    iiritk    fhom    in    fhp    S11H    hilt.    tO    fdith.    LVflCh    i

By JENNIFER Jl ERGENS Associated Press Writer

ROSELLE. Iowa lAPi -The wedding of Phil Markway and Carla Rupiper was everything a wedding should be. replete with restless childsen. popping flashbulbs and a feast of baked beans and ham.

The mood at the .American Legion hall turned sober only once; in asking God to bless the newlyweds. Phil's twin brother Greg, the best man. was unable to hold back tears.

The 24-year-old Markway twins, virtual mirror images of each other, share the same friendly, outgoing manner. The same shade of brown hair and eyes. The same winning smile,

The same rare, and in its most severe .forms, deadly disease.

They also share a-victory. They have beaten the odds.

Phil and Greg suffer from xeroderma pigmentosum, or .XDP. an inherited skin disease marked by extreme sensitivity to sunlight. So extreme, says their doctor, Henry T Lynch, that patients with even minimal exposure to sunlight can develop hundreds of skin cancers.

\'ictiras of the severest form ot^ XpP ha\;e a life expectancy of 2()-vears. but many die before their 10th birthday. There is no cure. .Avoiding the sun or using protective cream can pre-vmt malignant tumors. Chemotherapy once they develop won't work; they spread too fast.

XDP symptoms ran be severe: mental retardation, speech abnormalities, deafness, facial paralysis. Some young patients are timid, hostile and unstable.

None of this has touched 6reg and Phil .Markway, both of whom got married last summer. Phil in July and Greg a month later.

An abundance of freckles are the sole XDP symptom they have.

"A medical .curiosity. " says Lynch, who has known the family since 19,57 when the malady was first diagnosed. Actually, the medical curiosity extends further; three more of the seven .Markway children have XDP, cases more severe than the twins' because they had already-been exposed to the sun before the illness was diagnosed. At the time. Kathleen was 14, Patrice l.'i and Jeff 7.

They also have beaten the odds At 17. Jeff was given a year to live; Patrice got a similar prognosis when she was 22 Today, Patrice is 39. married witfi four children, Jeff 33 with three children, Kathleen 40 and the mother of two.

Almost two years ago, Phil was admitted to Saint Joseph's hospital in Omaha for the removal of two malignant tumors, his first, on his arm and face.

Beause he knew what to look for. Phil immediately-spotted his tumors and had them treated. "It happened so fast 1 didn't have time to dwell on it. It was a physical thing, not emotional. My leg hurt because they took the graft from the leg and my arm hurt because it was in a cast." he says.

The Markways, thought to

Jellyfish

Menace

Studied

all

ATHEN.S. Greece AP Jeliyiish are m bloom over the Mediterranean and the experts don't know how to protect s'Aimmers and fishermen trorr. '.heir painful. . sometimes deadly, itings.

Scientists and engineers from the United States and Hi European nation.-; recently concluded a week-long conference on the jellyfish menace sponsored by the United Nations Environment Program, admitting thev are baffled.

Five years ago, two species of jellyfish suddenly started to multiply around the Mediterranean warm coastland waters, where about 200 million tourists spend vacations every year.

Jellyfish "blooms' are formed by thousands of densely packed jellyfish, each able to bud off into more than a hundred young jellies.

be the only identical twins'' with the dikase, are watched even more carefully since Phil's operation. Although Greg has never had a tumor. Lynch worries that because they are identical twins. Greg might begin to develop tumors.

But the twins are optimistic. "God gave it to us and we have to live with it. but weve been real lucky, everything's been going our way." Greg says.

"They're beating the odds with this thing." says Greg's wife. Mary, although she worried w-hen Phil had his

operation. Were all so close and when your best friend is lying there...1 thought, this could-be Greg, she says.

Carla had started to date Phil just before the operation.

"She never left the hospital, Phil says. And she made the best chocolate chip cookies.

There is little chance of the diseasebeing passed on to their children because both parents would have to have the recessive gene. Very-unlikely, says Lynch.

When Greg told Mary about XDP, his reassuring

Five of Dolly and Norbert Markway's seven children suffer from a rare skin disease that usually proves fatal. But all five Markways have beaten the odds, a medical miracle their mother attributes to faith.

manner put her at ease. But her parents didnt think the marriage was a 50-year bet, she says. My parents got a little upset.

According to Carla, Phil has been more conscientious about keeping ouToT the sun and wearing his cream since his operation.

Nevertheless, says Lynch, it is almost impossible to

control exposure to sunlight, which penetrates clothing.

Because the twins showed extensive freckling shortly after birth, their mother, Dolly, immediately began keeping them out of the sun. The twins went to school wearing dark glasses, wide-brimmed hats, jeans and long-sleeved shirts.

"Mom would scare us, but

when youre a kid thats all you understand. Greg recalls. Shed say, Look, if you dont stay out of the sun, youre going to have to go to the hospital. But it wasnt like she was lying.

Because of their sensitivity to sunlight, neither twin was allowed to play team sports, in school. Because they had each other, they say. they never felt isolated.

Greg says that when he has children, he'd like to see them do the things he couldnt do. He says it bothers him a little to think that he won't be able to play

with them in the sun. but, Ill just play with them at night.

The twins are very well adjusted in the face of a very serious disease. says Lynch. I give full credit to their mother and father. I cant emphasize enough the support that their parents provided...

Other doctors have been amazed that the Markways are doing so well and have questioned their mother about how she brought them up. in search of significant clues.

Mrs. Markwav attributes it

to faith. Lynch affees that faith has helped the family

through rough spots. They created a good psychological, climate for their adjustment, , which has really paid off, he says.

The family has coped, Mrs. -Markway says, by taking' each day at a time. You cant spoil today by worrying; about tomorrow.    ;

Lynch, despite his op- timism. had often wondered whether he would see the day when Greg and Phil would get married.

Their parents never doubted it.

AMERICAS FAMILY

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When the film Saturday Night Fever was raising temperatures around the country, you couldn't walk into a disco without being blinded by the glare of white suits. This summer, the success of Ftash-doTKe brought torn sweatshirts coyly clipping off legions of shoulders. Well, its

By Marion Long

time to turn the other chic to space-flight gear, a look inspired by the movie The Right Stuff

At the movie's mid-October premiere in    ^

Washington, D.C., jumpsuits were the order of the evening. Former asr trdnaut Scott Carpenter sported a black leather number. Fred Ward, who plays Gus Grissom in the film, wore a purple jumpsuit, and Charlton Heston was in orange.

Avirex, a New York US clothing manufacturer    ^

with a Manhattan outlet fittingly called The Cockpit, put on a fashion show at the premiere party, featuring rocket wear for civilians. Certainly Avirex should know about the right stuff; It has a contract with NASA to clothe the astronauts. Another New York designer, Robert Comstock. is working on a line

lUJ.JWfUL 1(1

that will indude flight jackets and parachute p^ts.

Its always difficult to know whether a fashion trend will take off. but its a safe bet that designers and department stores are counting on hordes of customers to start taking,pp space.

mcouma

evote of Mexican know the pitfalls their passion; marga-ntas with an unexpected kick and chili so fiery it causes roof of the mouth mdtdown. Now another hazard has come to light: If not chewed properly, taco shells and chips can harm the esophagus, making it im-posstole to eat for weeks, warns Dr. Tim Hunter of the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center in Ten^.

Whats a gringo to do? First off, pay careful attentk)n to the Eaters Dig^ put out by the Del Taro Corporation in Atlanta. The guide gives tips on the pro-

^evote

fa

AYMPCMWOIK

per manner of downing a taco (see diagram), along with tips for burrito consumption to wit As you eat your way toward the closed end, deftly move your fingers and the wrapper down, so you dont mi up with either in your mouth. Now, if we could only figure out how to work the guacamote dip.

t^^t

ecause of their cciun-trys healthy economy, the Japanese are tfidught to love their jobs more than workers elsewhere. Not so. concludes a new study of Japanese and American workers, believed to be t.he largest such comparison survey ever made.

A team of Indiana University researchers, who talked to 7,87 workers in indiaiiapolis and Tokyo (and surrounding industrial areas), found that the average U5. employee is much more satisfied with his job than the comparably env ployed Japanese.

The re^rt reveals that 81 percent of the Americans are somewhat or very satisr fied with their jobs, compared with 53 percent of the Japanese; 67 percent of the Americans would take their present jobs again, compared with 53 percent of the Japanese; and 68 percent of American workers are willing to work harder to help their company succeed, compared with 44 percent of the Japanese.

Finally, an overwhelming 88 percent of Americans believe that a company and its employees are like a big family." Only 36. percent of Ja^ nese workers h(d such an idyllic view.

ft, HECsKn^t Rider seven plaindotheskidsdecidedtotake the law into their own hands.

Reveals dub president Erk Dernarj^, a haicHwiled lOyear-old, We went around to people's houses and told them itoout the cases we could solve: stolen bikes and other stolen stuff, and finding out who knocked over their trash cans." Who could turn the sleuths down when their fee is such a steal; 25 cents split among Seven ahaimiscs.

But even with the most so-

PMVJOiim

SL Marie, Mich., may had its last bit of ^ vandalism. Because the Knight Riders have k^st swung into town.

Patterning their investigative techniques after their favorite television show you guessed

phisticated equipment the Knight Riders boast a shortwave walkie4alkie network that Mickey Spillane mi^t envy there are some cases that have yet to be cracked. Recently an ex-convict wrote to Erk and his Byear-old sister; Tina, askir^ for help in kxatif^ his children. He said 25 cents a kid and he has seven kids, Erk says craftily. The group is still working on that one, but business is booming, and the group has just recdved an award from a local polke chief.

Remington Steele look out'

^^SSS&f

of the dumb blonde. Hes ma-jorii^ in basket wesving* is one ^'cs2! cut, along with, His scrape the oound he walks." Urftortunately for denizens of the grictiron, a recent study by the Cci Football Assodakion does li

to dispel this dumdum image.

A survey of 47 of the 61 colleges and universities in the association from 1976 to 1982 shows that only 46 percent of players on scholarships ated within a fiveyear period. But tile assod^ions ocecutive diredoi; Charles M. Nelson, prefers a more favorable interpretation of the statistic: Nearly half of the players did graduate within five years; and football

_ stereotype of the dumb jock is at least as strong as the stereotype

playos are grackiating at the same rate as the student body in general I believe tte survey improves the credftxltty of cd-I athletes,"

MKINMVS

(All Sagittarius) Sunday Rfta Moreno 52. Monday Frank Sinatra 58; Connie Francis 45. Tbesday - Dkk Van Dyke 58. Wednesday -Patty Duke Astin 37; Morw Amsterdam 59; John Davidson 42. Tliiirsday Tim Conway 50. Friday Liv UU-man 44. Saturday William Safire54.

Patrick M Linskey

VIM PfMMMl Md Ad nndor

Gerald Wroe

ViM

Jonathan Thompson

Thomas Plate CMrman EmmMm, Morton Frank

at RcMnCoiM. NonnanLoteenf.AnitaS>jnviief;K>wriMLoikyntaM). KMtkMMBaandJMOBMbaro(VWln(don>.WetertW(ndMw(UAngaiM.    .

V.P. Mfg. A DIt o( OperdllOM. Richard Mklan. Prod. DIt. DavKt Qmwy. PtmnkOQ. Micha Montemurro; MWwp MOt WIMm

V.P-Amoc. Ad Dk.. Joe Ffef, Jr, EmIm. Mgr.. Lew    Ok,    ft&SSTSt.

14 FAMO.V WEEKLV DECEMBER 11 * 1983





3-A. See-Thru Music

Makers in 4 styles. Each........

3-B. Porcelain Figurines.

6V2 tall. Each................

\^ia9ai\# ^iciuciotiliv

Figures.^11V2 tall. Each........

3-D. Child/Flower Arrange-

ment under glass. 8 tall........^5

3-E. Porcelain Keepsake"

Boxes. Many styles.    Each.......^2

3-F. Porcelain Clown Doll,

approx. 10 tall...............

3-G. Porcelain Praying

Chiid with candle .............^3

3-H. Set of 3 Hexagonal

Trinket Boxes................^3

3-J. Crystal Menagerie.    64 a

Assorted animals. Each.......^ 1

3-K. Tiffany-Style Mirror

Boxes, each.................

3-L. Musical Instruments

play sweet tunes. Each.........

3-M. Porcelain Musical    <4 a

Figurines, 10 tall Each......^ lO

3-N. Child Musical Figurines.

Each.......................^7

3-0. Porcelain Child Music

Box with flowers. 7V2 tall ^ 1

3-P. Kiddie" Banks made of

paper mache, each............^3

3-Q. Musical Ceramic    <4#%

Helicopter................. IU

3-R. Ceramic Basket of    <4#^

Cherries  ................. ill

3-S. Ceramic Clown Mask

Wall Plaque, 7 x 5V2..........

3-T. Grand Piano Musical    6 4 a

Jewelry Box...............^10

Items on this page are gift-boxed.

f I-** '

Ha

'    V,

V- p s .    *    -

r. \





The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Collector Finds Path To Better Fggbeater

By JOHN W. REID

Associated Press Writer

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -Can you beat this?

When Don Thornton wants to whip up an omelet, he can choose from dozens of antique eggbeaters hanging from his kitchen wall.

If none of them is right for the job. hundreds more are stacked in drawers and cupboards in the dining room a few feet away.

Thornton collects old eggbeaters. By his count, has more than 550 now. and ; the number keeps going up.

One can never have enough of them, you know, he explains,___________

Some of the eggbeaters re little more than twisted wires with simple gears. Others are large, elaborate and shiny - made during the era when America had recently discovered its industrial might

Man used to express himself - his personality -in designing eggbeaters. says Thornton, reaching for one whose blades resemble those of a helicopter.

The eggoeaier hanging next to it looks and works like a childs mechanical top. Its handle is a red, wooden ball attached to a foot-long , plunger. Pushing it up and down turns the dashers. A flywheel maintains the momentum between strokes.

There's an eggbeater for every occasion. says Thornton, turning his attention to a long, skinny model that looks like a unicycle. This one is used for mixing eggs in tall, narrow glasses.

Why collect eggbeaters?

Whats the point of collecting something that everyone else does? I know of only four other people doing this - and this collection is by far the biggest.

He got the idea several years ago when, as a reporter in California, he was assigned to do a story on a fellow who had 50 eggbeaters.

About a year later, I picked up an old eggbeater at a flea market. Pretty soon, things started getting out of hand. Iw'as hooked.

Now Thorntons collection includes a Dover Egg Beater made in 1870. just 15 years after the first eggbeater patent was issued.

He moved to Connecticut 2':- years ago and is an assistant managing editor at The Hartford Courant.

Thornton is author of The Eggbeater Book, billed as the first and last word about man's greatest invention.

Thornton's a serious collector of eggbeaters, but that doesnt mean he takes the subject seriously.

He cant resist a grin as he tells why he wrote the book.

'1 felt eggbeaters just werent getting the recognition they deserved. People were ignoring a great part of American history.

After all. did you ever study eggbeaters when you were in school?

Thornton doesnt expect his book to end up in home reference libraries.

Lets face it, its the type -of book youd buy on impulse - something to give to that strange neighbor next door.

(The Eggbeater Book is published by Arbor House.)

Whitfield PTO Plans Meeting

The G.R. Whitfield Parent-Teacher Organization will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the school gym and will feature the schools annual Christmas concert.

The concert will include performances by the Whitfield band directed by Anne Fleming, the chorus direacted by Anton Wesley and the strings directed by Barbara Sauter.

According to PTO officials, no business will be discussed at the meeting.

The CiW Cemetery DiVision is responsible for the maintenance ana care of all City-owned cemeteries Brownhill, Greenwood, and Cherry Hill. For further information concerning City cemeteries, call the Public Works Department at 752-4137.

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O O Hill Street Blues Visiting Russians decide to defect at the station house, Belker rides with an over-eager paramedic, and LaRue's auto dealer brother-in-law is picked up for soliciting. (1 hr.)

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Thkke Of The Night (SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C. Sunday. December 11.1983 Q.2

Tent Show Recreated

By PAULA DITTRICK LUBBOCK, Texas (UPI)

- Traveling tent shows staged their last performance long ago and rolled up their drama houses, but ftwrner troupers are not going to let the world forget them.

Several recently helped Texas Tech's University Theater recreate and filmd the vaudeville entertainment that in 1927 was reported to have been seen by more people than Broadway and the remainder of the theater industry combined.

Tech theater professor Clifford Ashby, who has spent the past 10 years studying the tent shows, said, "The tent show was ^true repertory, usually presenting six plays in the course of a week, the Lords day being

-reservedfortraveling.----

"Ranging in size from six to as many as 60 people, companies moved about the countryside with no fixed itinerary, playing wherever there might be an audience with money for tickets.

He and a former student, Suzanne DePauw May, now of Atlanta, wrote a book entidled "Trouping through Texas" about Harley Sadler, a West Texas tent show star.

Ashby said Sadler was famous for his portrayal of Toby, a country bumpkin who outwitted a city slicker in the tent shows for rural audiences. Tented drama reached its peak befofe the Depression and the interruption of World War II.

One of the troupers who helped Ashby was Bill Gray, a Floydada farm equipment businessman, who says, "Im one of the last, if not the last, of the tent show babies. He was born on the Fred Brunks Comedians tent show on Oct. 29, 1937. in Tahoka.

Gray played the drums and marimba for several show organizations as well as playing parts as a child. He was a third-generation trouper, following his fathers and grandfathers steps until the demise of the tent shows.

"It was kind of in my blood," Gray said. "I came by it honestly.

Another cooperating veteran, Lona Johnson. 78. said she preferred not to talk about her parents reaction to her decision to leave her job playing piano for silent movie houses to join a tent show.

I think it upset the whole town, Mrs. Johnson said. "They didnt want their little girl to leave."

Upon the death of her first husband, she left the troupers and worked in Fort Worth as a telegraph operator. But an old tent show friend. Robert LaThey Johnson, came to town and rekindled old memories.

"When 1 went down to the show that did it, Mrs. Johnson said. "My feet started itching.

She quit the railroad, married Johnson and performed with him on tent shows until 1957. Then they put on magic shows for schools until they retired in 1 97 3 and settled in Greenville.

"Now when we have a little squabble, she says I married her because I wanted a piano player and I say You married me because you wanted to get back into show business, said Johnson, 84, who put in 53 years of continuous trouping.

He said he used to earn about $40 a week.

"Times changed, Johnson said. The coming of World War II meant all the old-time performers went into defense work. They never did come back into the business.

I kept my hand in the pie, he said.

He said he worked on a defense production job during the day and worked on a nightclub act at n>ght during the war.

Peggy Haverstock, widow of tent show operater Holland Haverstock, and others have contributed materials and photographs from the tent snow era to the Texas Tech Southwest Collection.    ,

: The former troupers also were filmed doirife some of -their old skits and musical *acts for the collection while in town to attend Tech Theaters recent production of a ;three-act tent show comedy.

* A theater crew put on the production directed by .Ashby, and some of the troupers got on stage as the show started to give the candy pitch.

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G-12-11





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Announced

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CHRISTMAS TOK of p    LIBERTY

^    HALL

December 18 from Greenville

$10.00

Christinas open house touring plantation home of Owen Rand & Sarah Graham Kenan in Kenansville, N.C

See this ancestral home restored to its original simple elegance all aglow with Christmas of the 1800s.

Call:

QIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.

T I    319    Cotanche    St.

Greenville, N.C. 27834

v

Louise Brown, the first baby known to be artifically conceived outside the womb, was born in England July 25. 1978 Sperm from John Brown and a healthy egg from his wife. Leslie, were joined in a test tube using a

technique pioneered ^ gynecologist Dr. Patriic Steptoe and University of Cambridge physiolo^st Rob^-ert Edwards. The healthy baby girl, weighing 5 pounds*. 12 ounces, was delivered by Caesarean section.

N.Cifcactemy of f)ance firts

Presents

The Nutcracker

Ayden Griftoir High Auditorium

Saturday. Dec. I?. . .7:00P.M. Evening

Sunday, Dec. 18 , . t3:00P.M. Matinee

Sunday. Dec. 18. . . . 7:00 P.M. Evening

Tickits S4 In Advancf 4 50 At Door --

Tickets Available:

N C Aiademv of Dance Aris

 207. Flaw Dr 3,55-2140

and Ai Barre L.id 75b bb70

KARE.N ELIZABETH TRIPP...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Richard Tripp Jr. of Farmville. who announce her engagement to Robert Earl Flastwood. son o Mr. and Mi's, (leorge Eastwood of Route 1. Walstonburg. A Feb. 4 wedding is planned. u,    .

Cooking Is Fun

B\(K(11.V BKOWNSTONK Issociated Press Food Editor

((I.MF.4NV DINNER Chicken a la King Rice, (ireen Peas & Salad Fruil Turnovers & Coffee

niK'KEN .4 LA KING A ne\A version ot a,n old favorite

i cup butter

. pound mushrooms, sliced tablespoons unbleached all-purpose Hour l.pmt hall-and-halt 1 chicken bouillon'-cuife dissolved in cup boiling water, cooled 2 . cups cufted 1 inch cooked ehicken 4-ounce jar pimientos, well-drained and sliced Salt and pepptm to taste

In a medium saucepan melt butter, add mushnwms and cook over moderate heal., stirring olten. until w*ilted - 5 to Hi minutes Stir m flour it heat, gradually stir in hall-and-hall and bouillon, keeping smooth, Cook over moderately low heat, stirring constantly, until thickened and bubbling Stir in chicken, pimiento, salt and

pepper

servings.

Reheat. .Makes 6

KVFNING REFRESHER

lee Cream & Honey Apple HDNEV .APPLE.

One ot my^'sister Rowena's -quick lancies'' liwi 1 lept-di b'. request

1 tablespoon butter

2 tablespLwns honey

1 very large red Delicious apple, pared and coarsely shredded 1' j loosely packed cups

Dash each ok ground mace and ground cardamom

In an K-inch skillet cook butter and honey, stirring, untiThot. Sttr in apple, maee and cardamom C(M)k quickly and brieily. stirring. just until the apple is very hot and slightly cooked - shreds should not lose their shape .Serve at once with vanilla ice cream Makes'i servings.

SN.ACKTIME FARE Coconut Popcorn Beverage

DONNA MARIE STOCKS...is the daughter of Mrs. Guy Stocks of Kinston, who announces her engagement to Gary Wayne Hardee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Lee Hardee of Grifton. A Feb. 2() wedding is being planned.

COCDNTT POPCORN Jus! right tor the holiday season, and with delightful lemon flavor,

2 quarts freshly ppped corn 1 cup packaged flaked moist coconut 2-3rds cims toasted coeoniit ;4 cup sugar j cup light corn syrup 1 tablespoon lemon juice

I iai7ic.>|>0uii Aamiiu .

Into a large buttered saucepot turn the popped corn, moist coconut and toasted coconut. In a medium saucepan, over medium heat, stirring constantly, cook the sugar, corn syrup and lemon juice until the sugar dissolves' and mixture" almost boils -about 10 minutes DIf heat, stir in vanilla; cool for 2 minutes; pour over popped corn and coconut: With a long wooden spoon, mix well Return to medium heat and stirring constantly, heat until corn begins to stick together. Press out onto a 15-by 11-inch sheet of wax paper Cool completely It necessary to dry lurther. let stand, uncovered tor 8 to 12 hours Cut in large squares and wrap each msaran.

ENTIRE STOCK/ii'

\Afool

Every Table Reduced!

2or.5ir

MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY!

r N

'/

'COUPON

/;

I

I I I I I I

I I

^000

o u p o N

I

I I I I I I I I I

Vogue

Butterick    Moff

See&Sew

PATTERNS

IN PRESENT STOCK ONLY LIMIT 2 PATTERNS

^25

Nono

NOT IN ADDITION TO OTHEI

COUPON

^lOCr    NOT    IN    AUDITION    T(

/JV*    HIHilV    OTMEH    DISCOUNTS

CRAFT SUPPLIES

CROSS STITCH-CANDLEWICK* CHRISTMAS

NOT IN AUDITION TO OTMEH DISCOUNTS

6REENVILLE SQ. K'MART CENTER

Arlington S Groenvillo Blvd.

OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 CLOSED SUN.





mm

Panel

Finds

Fiscal

distress

WASHINGTON (AP) -suites and local governments have experienced severe fiscal distress over the last five years, but there has' ben no consistent national policy to help ease their problems, a panel has con-cloded.

The Advisory Commission om Intergovernmental Relations said in a draft report thdt states and communities suffer from both temporary downturns in the economy and long-range structural changes.

^ *Both structural and cyclical forces combine to generate different degrees of distress for communities and -state and local governments, including plant closings, loflg-term unemployment, an(l physical deterioration, the commission concluded affier a four-year study.

tlie commission is a federally sponsored body of federal, state and local government leaders and representatives from the private sector. It studies intergovernmental problems and issues occasional reports and recommendations,

However, nearly every state government and large municipality has experienced severe fiscal distress in the last five years, the report says.

The study also found that although the problems are widespread, a concerted response is difficult because they are not evenly distributed.

At the local level, revenues are down and demand for services are up. States, the report said, are in such precarious financial condition that they cannot help their communities.

The report said the federal government has not been much help over the last 10 years.

There is no consistent pattern of national policy response to community distress, the report said. Since 1965 there has not been a consistent national wlicy response to the pro-)leiiis of distressed communities."

The report said various a^iroaches have been tried. Including the categorical aid programs that flourished in the 1960s and 1970s. block grants, partnerships between the public and private sector and reliance on volunteerism and free market forces.

The commission noted that recent shifts in national policy toward a free market approach have resulted in substantial reductions in aid to state and local governments.

It is unclear which approach is most effective, the report says. However, it is clear that the capacity of state and local government to meet the needs of their citizens has been negatively affected."

Red Eye Rejoins City Hall

CALDWELL, Idaho (AP)

- City officials had so much un burying Red-Eyed >ete, the last stoplight on nterstate 80, that theyve lug him up for a new issignment.

With elaborate pomp and eremony, Pete was buried ast month after a mock trial in charges that he was infair to motorists. But dayor A1 McCluskey said les uncovered a new witless to testify in Petes lehalf.

Hes been exhumed, the nayor said Saturday.

The stoplight, still in the :asket in which it was ouried, was clad in a Santa Claus suit for Saturdays prade, launching the Christmas season. Me-Clpskey said Pete wont be biried again.

?Hes got a new assi^n-mbnt, the mayor said, ijes going to the bronzing - then he will be laid outinCityHall.

McCluskey said there was sc^uch interest in Pete that hti will be used to solicit dmtions to beautify roads th|rou^ the community.

The Daily Reflector, Gfeenville. N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983 A-9

MONDAY

ONLY!

greenville

Entire Stock of Ladles Nike Shoes!

25 %

Regular $24 to $40

OFF

Tennis and running shoes in leather, nylon and canvas shoes. White and navy.

Shop Monday through Saturday 10 A.M. to 10 P.M.

h:

Mens Andhurst Polyester/ Cotton Shirts and Duckhead

/Air ' Andhurst Belted Corduroys

12.99.14.99

Shirts, Reg. $16 & $20

Men's shirts with button down collars. Assorted plaids in fall colors. Sizes S, M,'L, XL. Brushed Jwill and .yarn-dyed woven shirts.

15.89.18.99

Slacks, Reg., $21 to $28

Slacks in 100% cotton and polycotton belted and beltless styles. In navy, grey and tan. Sizes 29 to 42.

Mens Cotton Sweaters by Andhurst on Sale!

14.99

Regular 24.00

100% Cotton sweaters with the classic V-neck styling. Fashionable solid colors in off-white; navy, red and green. Sizes S, M, L, XL.

Ladies Danskin and Flexatard Dancewear! Junior Nylon Racing Jackets on Sale!

Regular 6.95 to $46.

25%

OFF

Regular $36 to $40.

22.99

Leotards, tights, accessories in stripes, solids, prints. Banded sleeves and waist, zipper front. Solid's.

Junior Pants in Corduroy and Twill!

19.99

Assorted solids and stripes. Cuffs and straight legs.

Regular $30 to $35

Select Group of Ladies Fall Sportswear!

1/3

Now

Reduced

Blazers, skirts, pants. Fully lined. 100% Wool. Plaids, solids.

Junior Solid and Striped Sweaters!

..........................1    /3off

Pullover, V-neck, crew neck and boat neck styles.

Misses 100% Polyester Personal Fall Sportswear!

25%

OFF

Biazuis, panta, shirta, skirts. Solid colors. -

Mens Members Only Jackets by Europe Craft!

39.99

Regular 55.00

Racing style jackets with knit waist and cuffs, famous racing strap coilar. 100% Nylon in fall fashion colors. Sizes 38 to 46.

Select Group of Mens Outerwear Now at Super Savings!

20% OFF

l/alues to 200.00-

Choose from leather coats and polyester fills. In mountain parkas, waisted jackets and golf style jackets. Fall fashion colors. Sizes 36 to 46.

Ladies Members Oniy^ Racing Style Jackets!

39.99

Regular

55.00 .

Zip front, banded knit waist, sleeves, nylon Hning.'

Junior and Misses Oxford Cloth Shirts!

9.99

Solids and stripes. Button down collar, long sleeves.

Regular

16.00..

Girls 7 to 14 Oxford Cloth Shirts on Sale!

Begofsr-13.00. .

8.69

Solids and stripes. Button down collar and long sleeves

Mens Leather Blazers by Andhurst on Sale!

139.99

Regular 170.00

100% Genuine leather jackets with two button front, center vent and patch pockets. In brown, black and burgundy. Sizes 38 to 46 regular and long.

Mens House Slippers at a Big Savings!

Regular 15.00 to 30.00.

25%

OFF

Leather uppers, nylon lining and padded soles. Tan, black, more.

Ladies Dress Shoes by Auditions on Sale!

Pumps with assorted heel heights. Navy, wine and black.

Ladies 100% P.V.C. Rainslickers Reduced!

7.99

Reversible rainslickers in navy/green. Sizes S, M, L.

Regular 10.00 ..

Young Mens Plaid Shirts by Arrow on Sale!

Regular 19.00 .

25%

OFF

Long sleeves, one chest pocKet. Fail fashioh plaids.

Junior Jeans by Famous Makers Now Reduced!

Regular 38.00 to 42.00.

1/3

OFF

100% Cotton, 5 pockets, black only. De la Renta* and Klein*.    .

Cotton Sweaters for Juniors and Misses!

Aegular 26.00 ,

15.99

Boat neck, crew neck styles. Pink, purple, navy and more.    .    

Boys Corduroy Sportcoats By Andhurst Reduced!

Regular 60.00

Polyester/cotton corduroy coats with two button front and center vent. Pin wale corduroy in tan, grey and navy. Sizes 8 to 20.

Ladies 100% Hi Bulk Leg Warmers!

Regular 7.50 Pr.

4.99

Ladies Hanes Too Pantyhose

25%

Regular 2.50 to 4.50

Stripes and solids in assorted fall tones. One size for all.

Choose from Barely There, South Pacific, Town Taupe, more.

Ladies Folding Umbrellas by Totes!

Mens Long Sleeve Woven Plaid Shirts!

In red, green, navy and brown. Assorted styles.

25%

OFF

Regular

20.00...

14.99

Button down collar, placket sleeves. Polyester/ cotton.

Ladies Leather WalleU by Buxton!

?oJo*to 25.00.................25    ^    OFF

Wallets and cigarette cases in assorted fall colors.

Boys 8 to 20 DonMoor Crew Neck Sweaters!

12.99

Regular

18.00..

Polyester/wool blend, fffeather shades in navy, grey, more.

Mens Mountain Parkas by Mountain Trails!

49.99

^41

Regular 65.00

Nylon/cotton shell, acryllc/wool lining. Velcro fastened flap

pockete. In green, steel blue and S,M,L,XL

khaki. Sizes i

^ Mens 100% Polyester Slacks by Jaymat!

29.99

Regular 38.00

Expando-Matic waistband. Solid colors of navy, grey, tan, forest green. Sizes 32 to 42. Hurry in and save now!

Mens Dress Shirts by Andhurst on Sale!

Regular

15.00...

12.99

Single needle tailoring. Polyester/cotton. Assorted solids.

Boys 8 to 20 Yarn-Dyed Flannel Shirts!

Regular 11.00 ..

7.99

Button thru, long sleeves. 2 Bias pocl^ts. 100% Cotton. '

Mens Solid Color Pajamas by Andhurst!

Regular 12.50 ..

9.99

Polyester/cotton. Long legs and long sleeves. Assorted colors.

Ladies

Shoes

and

Boots

Reduced!

OFF

Reg. 45.00 to 80.00

Choose from pumps, slings and boots by 9] West. Leather uppers on leather soles. Fall fashion colors are navy, cordovan, brown, [ taupe. Sizes b'^h to 10. Buy .several pair and| save! *

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10a.m. Until 10 p.m.-Phone 756-B-E- L-K (756-2355)





the singing, George said, Relax. Your voice is as good as mln... .When it comes to good sportsmanship, it seems Charlton Heston should carry home the trophy. At least thats the opinion of Paul (That Championship Season) Sorvino, with vdiom Heston recently

Have the nmMa been Mr in their oovera^e of the Gabor fMntty? -IXF., Lao Vcgaa,Nev.

No. Theyve been inaccurate but whats new about that? rhi an actresS, but ha doesnt mean Im not sensitive. im easily hurt. When 1 read an untruth, 1 suffer. I finally worked out a system for coping: My secretary reads whats written about me. If its a lie, she throws it away. Self-preservation is the answer.

edit . . . .Loni Andersons

daughter Oeidra is pledging the Kappa Kappa Gamma social sorority at the University of California at Los Angeles. Alrearfy a member of the Kappa house at U.C.LA. is Mnriskn Hargltnr, daughter of the late Jnyne Mansneld and Mk^ Harglln)^ Loni, if youll recall, played the statuesque Mansfield in the

1380 iclcvuiioii TtOVic titled

The Jayne Mansfield StoryAlthough ruto be    1

involved in    I

MOMTYNAU.

Do you hsve any implen-SHit nwortes tram ail yoor years In show business? -NX. Pontiac, Mich.

About 12 years ago, I was in the Sahara Hotel [in Las Vegas]. I went in unprepared. I sang, danced, did a monologue, played Let's Make a Deal. But I knew right off that it was all wrong. When youre booked for 14 days and you dread the second show of the first day, you wonder how youll get through the next 13.

LOS ANGELES - Oraoo WcBei, who can never be accused of releasing a movie before its time, has already taken an impressive 13 years to complete The Other Sde of the Wind starring Marlene Dielrlch and Joto Hnstnn Welles now claims hes solved the financial difficulties that had slowed production, and tha the film only needs a final

whole new significance during the Reagan Administration. Just ask Fabian WiMner, the Sheraton-Carl-tonnotels shoe shine man. Since he set up shop a year Milton Pitu, Keagans barber, hes found himself face-to-face, or rather, face to feet, with some of D.C.s top brass. Cabinet members and White House staffp's who are too

ago near

Edoardo (Mt) has a speciat day coming with Mom Sophia

bu^ to get to the Sheraton, send their shoes for the $1.50 onceover. One frequent in-

claims her next movie, due to begin shooting in January, will reunite her with Mardlo MattroiannL The two were last teamed in 1977, for A fecial Day. Lorens estranged husband and one time mentor producer Qarlo Pond, swears he has the actress lined up to play Marin Callas opposite Oliver Reed as Aristotle Onaaals More aediWe is Pontis claim that he has Sophia sifted to star in Something Blonde, if only because the comedy will feature 10-yearold Edoardo f^ti, their younger son, in his acting debut.

Robert Windekr

WASHINGTON - For Washington Republicans, toeing the party line has taken on a

person patron is former Sec-funs for (his) office.

retary of State Alennder Haig. Confides Fabian: Hes the most friendly and my best tipper... When Senator Rkhard Lugar (R-lnd.) recently gave a speech to the American Association of Rtness Directors in Business and Industry, he ^ the rare opportunity io put his words into action.

xm

Heston proves himself matchless when it comes to orhcourt manners.

Cover illustration by Stephanie Gerber.

While the senator was expounding on the virtues of fitness, one of his aides informed him that he had a mere 15 minutes to make the roll call for the final vote on a piece of legislation. Since Lugar along with Robert (D -W. Va.) and WflSam Praxadre (D-Wisc.) has not missed a vote in Conyea this session, and didnt want to start now, he made a quick exit and drove with a staff member to the bottom of Capitol Hill only to hit a traffic jam. Nothing if not resourceful. Lugar jumped out into the rain and clocked an 80 second quar-ter-mile dash (a personal best) up the Hill into the Senate Chamber with only seconds to spare. The expert commentary from his press aide: He did it pr^ fast, for wearing wing tips

Kahleen Maxa and Jane Ottenberg

teamed in the CBS miniseries Chiefs. We vyere playing tennis and an error was made by our opponents, says Sorvino. On the next shot, Charlton gave away the point to square the situation. . . . A friend of Brigitte Bardot sadly reports that the actress, now battling the severe depression that caused her to take an overdose of pills on her

NEW YORK In reminiscing about her lonfrsinging success in the msica] Hello Dolly!, the hit show that recently completed a cross-country tour, Gural Chauuhig gave some of the credit to, beiSeve it or not.

gravei-throated George Bwua Recalls Channing: When 1 was worried about

Ex-sex kitten Bardot seeks canine comfort

49th birthday (Sept. 28), is trying to learn to live by herself. Bardot reportedly says, Its better to have a man to lean on, but on the other hand, a man isnt a white cane. According to her friend, Bardot doubts shell ever really be happy again.... Barbra StRdaand believes in keeping her alter ego well dressed. Whenever she makes a new film, she sends a copy of some on-screen haberdashery to the Hollywood Wax Museum to keep the Barbra model as au courant as possible.

AnitaSummer\

e 1983 FAMILY WEEKLY. All riflMs fWWfVd.





Downtown Pitt PlazaSPECIAL MONDAY ONLY SAVINGS ON CHRISTMAS

/ C.yGIFTS TO LIGfffUPY^ HOLIDAYS!

Shop Downtown 10:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m.

Piil Plaza lQ;Oa,4Ti. u nti! 10:00 p jn.

Extra 20%

Already Reduced Black Denim Jeans by Gloria Vanderbilt and Calvin Klein Monday Only

Extra 28 %

Save 15 %

Large Group of Santa Cruz

*20.00

Pants, skirts, and tops in beautiful soft pastels. Fashion forward

Already Reduced Skyr Turtlenecks Monday Only! *13.50^

Regularly $19.00 100% cotton. All colors. V

Regular $38.00^ in the junior aept. Hurry! Limited quantity!

Already Reduced Brodys Own Acrylic Sweaters *9.99

to 20%

Regularly $18.00 Basic Crewneck. Great Cglors.

Group of Polo Shirts by Ralph Lauren *24.88 and *26.99

Regularly $31. and $32.50

Broadcloth and Madras Plaid Shirts.

Save 20%

Group of Misses Wool Co-ordinates by Pant-her

Save 20%

Save 20%

Extra 20%

Group of Misses Koret

Wool Co-ordinates

Pants, skirts, blouses, sweaters and blazers. Red,, navy, camel and grey. (Pitt Plaza Only!)

100% Australian WoqI. Black-Cranberry-Grey (Pitt Plaza Only)

Save 20 %

Ralph Lauren Fall Sportswear *23.20 to *55.20    ^

Reg. *29.00 to *69.00

Entire Stock of Misses Spring 1984 Koret Koratron Monday Only!

Already Reduced Group of Country Suburbans Wool Co-ordinates at 50% off

Save 20%

Group of Misses Personal Haberdashery

New Spring Colors! Raspberry-Aqua-Khaki ___   '    

Monday Only!

Save Additional 20%.

-Wool skirts, pants, sweaters in solids and plaids. (Pitt Plaza Only).

Skirts, pants, and blazers. Teal-Rose-Sable-Grey. Also available in larger sizes.

Save 50%

Group Of Ladies Fall Dresses by Serbin and others *25.00 to *45.00

Save 23%

Sweaters, shirts, skirts, and tops.

Reg. $50.00 to $90.00. Sizes 6 to

20 Solids and stripes.

Extra 15 %

Girls 7-14 Corduroy Levis *10.19

Regularly $22 straight leg levis in all colors.

London Fog

All Weather Coats

*99.99

Save Extra

P.'OOi/. 0/

OdVC dO '/3 70

20%

Reg. $130.00 Sizes 8-20 Single-breasted style.

Already reduced Stock of Fall Liz Claiborne Sportswear *24.00 to *96.00

Reg. $30.00 to $120.00 Sizes 4-14

J.G. Hook Sportswear 25.46 to 123.95

Get another reduction today!

Save 25 %

Entire Stock of Fall Healthtex *4.88 to *17.63

Reg.. $38.00 to $185.00. Sizes Skirts, blazers, blouses pants.

Save 25 %

Entire Stock of Childrens Ocean Pacific *9.00 to *33.00

Save 50 % Save 25 %

Group of Childrens Lingerie

Childrens Scanti-Panties 3 for *2.79

Regularly $6.50 to $23.50 Infants, Toddlers, 4-6x and 4-7.

Regularly $12 to $44 4-7, 7-14, and Preteen.

Regularly $1.00 to $10.00 Toddler, 4-6x, 7-14, preteen. T-shirts, slips, camisole sets and underwear.

Regularly $1.25 4-6x and 7-14 girls underwear is a great stocking stuffer.

Save 20

to 33V3%

Save 25 %

Famous Name Brand Shoes

All Bass, Dexter and Topsider Casual Shoes.

Save 25%

Choose from Amalfi, Garolini, Pap-pagallo. Bandolino, 9-West and many ^ more.

Reg. to $54. Choose from Moccasin, loafer or lace-up styles.

Sporto Duck Shoes *22.90

Save 25%

Etienne Aigner

Save 50%

Amalfi Shoes

Handbags

A

Reg. $28. Keep your feet warm & dry!

Reg. to $116. In navy, black, taupe & sig.

Reg. $64 to $82 Fall styles and colors.

Save 25 %

Mens Flying Scotsman V-Neck Orion Sweaters *24.00

Save 20%

Polo Aftershave *8.40

Save 25 %

Group of Mens Suits And Sportcoats

Save 33%

Save 25 %

Regularly $32.00 All colors available S, M, L, XL

Regularly $10.50 1.5 fl. oz. Bottle limit 2. No Rainchecks.

Regularly up to $265 suits in solid, pinstripe and glen plaid wool and poly-wools sportcoats in herringbone and tweed wool.

Mens Bass Weejun Loafers *44.90

Mens Wide Wale Corduroy Trousers *19.99

Regularly $67 Brown or Black all sizes available.

Regularly $25 Brodys own wide-wale corduroy in numerous colors. Sizes 28-

9    10    11

13    14

16    17    18    19    20    21

23    24

Pitt Plaza Open 10:00 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Downtown Open 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Hurry on in and select gifts

for the ones on your list





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday. December 11.1983 Q-l 1$cntist S^s Threat To Underground Water

;    ByMKll\KLK(H)I)V

   Associated    Press    Writer

; LAFAVEITE HILL. Pa. lAP - Forty years ago. scientist jiuth Patrick developed a way to diagnose a river's health by txamining the organisms living in it. .\'ow she is trying to lert the nation to troubles in the invisible underground water iupply.

\ .ls. Patrick, who made her reputation by wading into, by er own account, at least 8(N) or 9(K rivers on every continent txcept Africa to analyze pollution's effects, has turned her attention to the springs, underground lakes and rivers that iiost people wa Ik over but never see.

! Speaking o senators, representatives and their staffs in Washington recently, she said that groundwater provides % percent of the nation's drinking water, at least 1 percent of ^e underground supply is contaminated, the extent of (iritamination is growing, and nobody knows what to do about

C In the East, she said, the problem was caused by septic contamination, illustrated by the seepage that has ruined many wells on .New York's Long Island. In the Midwest and ther farming areas, the culprit is fertilizer and its high concentration of nitrates.

"The contamipation is widespread all over the United States." she said. "That doesn't mean everv well in everv

FORECAST FOR SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES; An early morning upset in your plans will take some patience, but later you will find you can make long-rahge plans to get a greater amount of security in yor life. Older experts can be helpful.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Spoiling your plans would not be wise. Remain steadfast and a business person can help you. Be happy.

TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Avoid a bigwig who can give you trouble. Your mate may feel irate so stay away for a few hours. The evening will be happy at home, r GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Avoid an argument between two persons who are important to you. Busy yourself at helping one in trouble. Take time to meditate.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Forget about work and be happy with good friends. Add to income by working on talents. Feel happier.

LEO (Jul 22 to Aug. 21) Stay with family and avoid coworkers today Show respect to the elderly; entertain them.

' You can learn a great deal.

> VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Remove yourself from an argument between a bigwig and a family tie. Drive careful-. ly; stay away from Sunday drivers.

; LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Concentrate on your books

* and avoid going out. Make decisions for the new weeks - aCiiViteS Plan hofne impfuvBrnoni.    ,

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Spend time with your ' mate and friends. Forget the practical and have a good ( time Be happy and outgoing.

; SaGiI iaHIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec 21) Think carefully before making drastic changes. Plan your future intelligent-1 ly. This is not a good day to be social.

! CAPRICORN (Dec, 22 to Jan. 20) Be more direct and ; honest. Show true affection to family and friends. Be happy instead of depressed.

* AQUARIUS (Jan. ,21 to Feb 19) Friends may be disap-t pointing so make some new acquaintances. Have fun but, ( learn. Don't stay out too late.

; PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Attend some lecture that

* gives you insight into spiritual and ethical matters. Take time to go sight-seeing somewhere youve never been.

* IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be I someone who can do well in life provided older individuals ; and parents plan a fine course for th future and give the ; best possible education. Teach to be more objective and

* self controlled early in life.

FORECAST FOR MONDAY, DECEMBER 12,1983

.

It

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Wind up whatever details or personal matters you have facing you. Avoid making decisions which pertain to important matters for they may lead to a considerable amount of trouble.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Handle private matters well, and steer clear of trouble. Don't discuss taboo subjects with others. Make sure you have gas in the car.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Avoid irate friends; they may take it out on you. Don't be demanding in going after personal aims. Be tactful.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Don't irk those in power, or you could lose out. Make sure you get your work done conscientiously. Avoid gossips.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) It would be unwise to make big changes in your work. Resist someone who is trying to pressure you. Think constructively.

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) Don't follow a hunch regarding a business affair. Use mature judgment. Don't be upset by your mates strange mood.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Too much talk is confusing; be pleasant and say little. World affairs could be depressing, but remain cheerful.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Dont argue with a co^orker because your' methods are different. Mind your own business Become more dynamic; you'll feel better.

SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) If pleasure is on your mind, make sure you can afford it first. Show more affection to your mate who feels rejected. Drive with care/

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Doc. 21) Concentrate^on future communications. Think carefully before visiting friends. Be loyal to a family member.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Dont criticize what partners are doing. Precision is important; correct reports or bills before mailing them.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Handle money matters carefully You could make financial blunders. Steer clear of an advisor who is helpful but not an expert.

PISCES (Feb. 201 Mar. 20) You feel discontented; avoid regular companions who have caused you to feel this way. Seek out those who are cheerful. Think positively.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY . he or she will be someone who in very much concerned with the trials and tribulations of others and wants to help, but teach to be objective. Gear education towards services.

"The Stars impel; they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

The Answers

W(KLI)SCPK; l-!jyrian; '-b. ;!-KI Salvador: 1-.lordan: I .i-Cabbagr Patch Dolls 3 !^ns.\.\ME: Yasuhiro.\akasonr I \l.VTtllWDHDS;l-b;2-e:3-c:4-a;.Vd I NEWSPI(TlRE:Waroil8r>

I PE0PLE\V.\T('1/SP0RTLK;I1T: 1-Environnieiital Protec-1 lion ,\gciKv; 2-lsaac Bashcvis Singer; ;-.Marcus .\llen: SMewtt Blanda; 5-DePaui

(congressional) district,.but in every congressional district we have found contamination."

"We have no national policy, no national monitoring system." she warned. "We dont know how extensive the problem is and it is bound to get worse."

Ms. Patrick, the first woman to serve as a director of the Dupont Co.. is a science adviser to President Reagan, the chairman of the environmental research department at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, and a pioneer among America's women scientists.

In 1948. she assembled a team that conducted the first comprehensive survey of the effects of pollution on a watershed by studying plant and animal life in the Conestoga Creek which drains into the Susquehanna River near Lancaster.

"I created the methodology to go into a river, look at all the organisms and come up with a pattern ol a healthy, natural stream and then show how pollution affects it." she says.

Forty years later, at age 75. she's still at it. In August, she braved 102-degree temperatures in the Southeast to cull field samples from the Flint River in Georgia, where a citizens group and a company have agreed to abide by her findings of ways to abate pollution from the company's plant.

To Ms. Patrick, it's another opportunity to put into practice one of her favorite maxims:

"You can have use without abuse if you are careful about what you put into a stream." she says. Every stream has an ability to absorb and break down a significant number of complex compounds. "

She does not subscribe to the theory that the best way to protect the environment is to return to almost primitive conditions.

"You can't have society without industry." she says "We wouldn't have the things we need. food, shelter, our homes. But on the other hand, industry has to realize that it is a responsible group."

Ms. Patrick says industry has cleaned up a iui.;. 'he pas! 4ii years, since the days when a ship that spent a night or two in the Delaware River would have emerged with its hull blackened by chemicals.    ,

The once-polluted Delaware now has shad runs in the spring. Salmon have returned to the Connecticut and there is more recreational use of the Snake River in Washington and Oregon, she says Unlike pollution in streams, rivers and lakes, contamination in the underground water supply usuallv is irreversible, she says, adding that the best way to guard against contamination is by regional planning.

With improvement in other areas ol the environment in the past 40 years. Ms. Patrick has hopes tor a solution to the problem!

"There's books in running briwks, sermons m stones and good in everything." she says.lways have a good and bad side in everything and the imporiant thing b to see the good side "

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Q-lg The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. December 11,1983

THE QUIZ

Answers On D-11

THE WEEKLY QUIZ IS PART OF THIS NEWSPAPERS SCHOOL PROGRAM

worldscope

(10 points for each question answered correctly)

1 L.S. Marines in Lebanon came under heavv fire from Druse gunners recently. The attack came shortly after (CHOOSE ONE: Svrian. Libsani anti-air( raft fire shot down two American fighter planes.

2 The cisilian unemployment rate fell to . C percent in Noyember. the lowest rate in two years.

a-6.2 b-8.4    c-10.1

3 Although the Reagan Administration publicly condemned right-wingterrorism in (CHOOSE ONE: El SaUador. Nicaragual, President Rc'dgan yetoed an extension ot a bill tyint; military aid to that country with progress m human rights.

4 Astronauts aboard the space shuttle "Columbia base been communicating via radio w ith Earth. One of the radio butts to speak with the

_asirunaiits_jwds-Kini _Kussein._al 1CH.OOSE ONE: Saudi Arabia. Iordan).

newspicture

5 shoppers are 'waitini; in line tor hours tor them. People are being stampeded and in-|utx'd in toy.stores trying tci buy them, lens parents are sate from a rc'cjuest to buy this year'shit > .conifrietewith birthcertiticatc's

newsname

(10 points,if you answer this question correctly)    V

In an ettort.to thwart terrorist attac ks against the White House, workmen are installing barriers at the entrance. The White House and the ( a)itol have occasionally been damaged. After the Ixecutivc' Mansion was fturnc'd to the ground during the iiHOOSf 0\[ ( i\il V\ar. War ot 1812i. it was rebuilt and pam'ed white It has bc-en callc'd the V\hite House ever since.

peopiewatch/sportlight

(10 points it you can identity this person in the news)

\s Prime Minister ot

(2 points tor each question answered correctly)

1 Rita lavelle a toimer ottiiial with the [PA. was recently iiinviited otking to COngrc'ss during a probe of possible vyiongdoings at that .igencv V\hat do the initials EPA stand

tor ^

lapan, I recently dissolved |a()ans Parliament su months ahead ot sc hc'd-ule. and I have set elei -lions tot Dcc(inber 18iti Despite opposition, mv Party is expec ted to rc'I.nn iTrntTol rt The gov er n -ment VXhoamli'

2 Barbar.i stieisand's tilm ' >entl ojrened to good reviews .Khiss the country. Ms. Streisand (troduced. directed, and stabs in tTVedTlni. wHuEiTsTrased on .1 short story'^y (CHOOSE OM Isaac BashevIS Singer. Saul Hellovy).

matchwords

{ Running back Mike Ro/iei ot Nebraska was named the winner ot this vc ai s Heisman Irophv. awarded annually to the lu'st plavei in collc'ge tootball I he only other player to icisl'i toi more yards m a season than Ro/ier was E SC s ( H()C)sl ON! Marc iis Mien. (,c'orge Rogers).

4 |.iu..Sienerud s last-sec oncl tield goal enabled the Green Bay

(4 points for each correct match)

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i.n k ( I - Ico lele,It tile ( liic ago Beats rc'c entlv. After the game, sietier 011 needed only one more tield goal to tie the record ot id) 1 .iieel lield goals field by .b .

S ( 0,11 If R,iy Meyer ol dfiOOsI ONI : loyola. DePaull I niyeisit\ cvoii Ills 'ooth career basketball game recently. Men I fiec ,ime only ilie litih c 1 Tlege c oac h to w in 700or more

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roundtable

Family discussion (no score)

Wilhhe ei oiioinic ii-iovery inlluence your holiday sho()()ing

Ibis

YOUR SCORE 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE' 81 to 90 points F telleni H to 80 points - Good 61 to 70 points - Fair Knowledge Industries. Inc 1212-83

Gospel Singing Stirring South In Revival Of Church^^sic

Hv HK KKHAt.t.

The Xnnisliiii .Star

.\P' - [;ar\ Higgiiis

ua.< leelinu ihe

iIKD.Mii.NT, .\la spin!

Singinii loud and clear to a recent Saturda,\ nighl cnmd ol about liHi at E'hiladelphia Baptist Church, lliggin.s leit the stage and strolled down the aisle fie paused now and tlien tu wipe his brow, preach some, and acknowledge a lew enthusiastic '.\men> '

Then he jumped the pulpit

He didn t climb it. or jump around it He jumped o\ er it

He threw down his microphone, got a running start and sailed over the three-lwt pulpit like an Olympic hurdler The spir.it. captured in song, "moved me to do it. ' he would sa> later

Singing the gospcd doesn't move every singer to hurdle the pulpit, and most gospel singings are more subdued But singings in .Alabama and elsewhere in the South do have two basic similarities they all carry a message ot ('hristianity. like a .good Sunday sermon set to music, and th(w all entertain.

Like any other torm ot entertainment, gospel singings have been molded by time and trends. Traditional singings were-born in the church, branched out to the big stage and into a bigger business, and now seem headed hack to where it all began

Singers, tans and promoters ol gospel musie sa\ the sing-lor-pay convention or auditorium-type smging> aren't frequent or popular in northeast Alabama as in the lutlosand early lifTOs

Gospel singings now are almost exclusively m smaller church gatherings, where groups with lesser-known name> pertorm tor the congregation at little or no charge

Talladega .Mayor Larry Barton, a singer and piano player

Kindness Works

KISSKLLVILLK. Ark i.AFi - T'he keeper ot a Noah's ark ot wiki animals on ( row .Mountain trains her ferocious charges from birth with large doses ot kindness

.At Ksther KnoN Kxotic Animal ('ompound can be found lioib. bears, peacocks, monkeys. Atrican pigmy goats, emu. and rheas, kept mostly two by two in separate cages.

"I spoil them terribly, but I also train them.' .Ms. Eno said in a recent interview.

I

Her newest acquisitions at the compound near this central Arkansas city are .John and Thor, two .African lion cubs she says are playtul as killens. The 12o-pound animals greet their owner with nuzzling when she risits their ma.sonry cages, reinforced with wire and steel.

aUjoimngiiieLiioiiwiiii Thor IS the namesake ol a f)80-pound lion. Thor 1. who used to roam inside her home

"Once 1 torgol to teed him You could hear his roar live miles away. " .Ms Eno said ot her former pet Lucas Llama comes running when .Ms Eno calls Sheila, a black ursidae hear, begs for cigarette bulls Jim Bear and Sheila once escaped their steel cages in be later discovered resting in trees m the yard.

Frank and Maime Elk are killers. .Ms Eno said, as Frank nuzzled her hand when called. Maime. expecting her second call 111 about three months, was not as friendly. \\

A rhea, which resemfiles a turkey, likes her keepers shmv hracelel

lor the Ilimeers gospel group, .says there was a time when ( alhoiin ( ounty was known statewide tor its convention Mnginus and area promoters' ability to attract big-name grou[)> to th( Anniston ('ity Auditorium. Only the Sand Mountain area rivaled Anniston in^the number of singings held; he >aid

Almost every community in northeast Alabama was big on con\ention ,'inging then, and its tans packed in to see groups like the Blackwood B.rothers. the Dixie Echoes, the Florida Boy-, the Happy Goodmans, Hqvie Lister and the Statesmen, tlie libpirations.,) 1) Sumner and the Stamps, the Thrasher Brothels. Wendy Bagwell and the Sunlighters. the Chuck Wagon Gaim. the Kingsmen. Sego Brothers and Naomi. Dottie Kambo all elevated to star status in a heyday that spanned two decades.

Somt' had Iheir ow n T\ shows. All cut records, which were sold in auditorium lobbies during breaks. Some even rode their uospel popularity to careers in other kinds of music. The Oak Kidiie Boys and Staller Brothers, tor example, are now tamous country singeis.

the groups and others like them developed big followings. Ieople who were not regular church-goers would attend go.-pel music Miigings laithlully, as long as one of their la v orite group.> wa^ singing. New. more contemporary gospel ionu> tlooded recoixl stoies and gospel music stations,

"\\v wtmi to one almost every week, in Anniston. Gadsden. Birminaham.'Bome, Ga . anywhere they were singing." says luamta'E'air ol .Jack>onville. who. along with her husband, Ed owns one 0! the largest gospel music collections in Noi hea'-t ,\lal),ama "It was just heautilul music. .Sometimes w e V, ent to -inginux w here they had to turn away crowds."

To meet (he mu.Mcal demands ot the new songs, groups increaved in r-ize Groups that started with a piano hired on mular pit ker".. a bass player and a drummer. Sound systems ht'came as aftvanced and expensive as those used by their j)op, rm k and country music counterparts.

Perhaps it became loo commercial tor the singers and their Ians. p.aiTonsays For some groups, the cost ot fielding a big-time gospel act became too expensive To book a big-name singing group, auditorium otticials would spend anywhere from $200 to $500. Split that xeven ways, with a cut tor the manager, and the weely paycheck "wasn t much to live on, "Barton says.

Sometimes the distribution wasn't all that fair, either, Itarton s.iys He remembers one group that "lived on pancake mix lor a week, things got so had." he says. "And all the lime, their manager was eating steak"

Ticket prices climbed to keep up with the cost of fielding a hig-tiame group .Some singings cost as much as $5. and some lamihe.s couldn't atlord it. Barton svs.

By the late IttTos, the number ol big convention singings had already started to drop oil in Northeast Alabama.

Still popular are smaller singings at churches, usually on Saturday night Boh Ihipe, a memtxtr of Philadelphia Baptist and a gospel tan. says his church has a singing abot once a month Like most churches, the church pays the singer by laking up a collection, or with some other small fee.

(j'ary Higgins, his wile .Martha, and neighbor Dana Brannon make up the Kidgemont Trio, Based in Cleveland. Tenn.. they sing at churches in Alabama. Georgia and Tennessee, traveling in a small van. A piano and guitar provide their only music; they specialize in traditional gospel.

"Contemporary is pretty music." Barton says "But people can't relate to it like Ihe old hymns. People would hear one of these new .songs, liut they wouldn't remember the words. You didn l hear many lolks going around humming it like they do hvrnns '

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I^NO-PCRUMBLE 'biRISTMAS COOKIES

By Marilyn Hansen

Sometimes we cant be with friends and loved ones during the holidays. A welcome package of home-baked gocxjies will brighten spirits and strengthen lines of love across the miles.

We have chosen a group of cookies and confections that will travel and keep well. Use waxed paper between layers and wrap securely with foil. Sprinkle plain popcorn between and around layers to keep cookies from shaking and breaking.

Needless to say, these cookies are also great to er ai liuiiie tu aiiiiiy and holiday well-wishers who stop by.

CHOCOUm-AUWOWDBJUli

V4 cup nnauhed butter or margarine, oftencd l/ cups simar

1 square 0 oz.) unsweetened baking chocolate

2 egg

I teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 tablespoon Kirsch liqueur, vodka or rum

1 cup (iVi oz.) finely chopped almonds 4 cups unsifted all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons ground dnnamon 1 teaspoon ground cloves

1 egg white '/i cup sliced almonds

1. Using electric mixer, cream butter with sugar until light and fluffy. Melt chocolate and blend into creamed mixture. Beat in eggs one at a time. Add lemon rind, Kirsch and almonds; mix well.

2. Sift 2 cups of the flour with cinnamon and cloves, blend into creamed mixture. Mix in rest of flour, a half cup at a time, until dough becomes stiff enough to clean the sides of the bowl. (You may not have to use all of the remaining 2 cups flour to achieve this.)

S. Turn out dough onto a lightly floured pastry cloth. Roll out about '^-inch-thick rectangle to fit a large cookie sheet (14x17 inches) Grease cookie sheet and place rec-tarule of dough onto it.

4. Beat egg white and brush over top of

dough; sprinkle with almonds. Bake at 325 for 20 to 25 minutes, or until done and lightly browned. While still hot. cut into rec-tan^ Cool arvj remove frtm pan.

Mokes 3 to 4 dozen ba rs

WMIITCJmi BONBONS

I can (6 oz.) frozen immge Joke concntrate, tiiawed

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8 Fwiii i Wi-iKo i)i;i    11

Three special recipes you make with Blue Diama Aimds, the dioice, fresh nuis from The Almond People* in California*

lice inti' this cake.. .smell the light fragrance of sherry and almonds. Youll see why we call it the Queen of Holiday Cakes. Made from a mix, baked in a Bi&dt pan, its nice and moist, keeps well. Travels with poise to parties. Why not make twoone for your holiday, one for a friend or relative?

1J eople are continually writing to us for r this recipeand no wonder. A zippy |. cheese spread is covered with whole blanched almonds (toasted first) to make a beautiful centerpiece for the table. Its easy and actually fiin to do. Make it the star of your holiday party.

If fyou have time to bake only one batch 11' ofcookies this Christmas, make sure ^ its this one! Almond Crescents are everything a Christmas Cookie should be. Buttery. With a delicate almond flavor and an interesting shape. And easy to do. (Ask a child to help!) Try them!

THE ALMOND PEOPLE*

California Almond Growers Exchange P.O. Box 1768 Sacramento, CA 95808





lesing For Survival

By W ALTER PI TN AM Assot ialed Press W riter JACKSONVILLE. Fla. I APi - From the tiny dusky seaside sparrow to the mammoth blue whale, hundreds of species have been placed in peril by the onslaught of 2th century progress Few places illustrate the delicate balance better than Florida, the nations Jastest-growmg state -home to some 10 million people and at least 31 endangered species.

Some, such as the bulky manatee and sleek Florida panther, have attracted the interest ol celebrities and state officials whose actions have heightened' public awareness about the species' plight

But other creatures, like the Choctawhatchee beach mouse .and .the. (ikaloosa

darter, struggle in an obscure fight for survival in Florida,

The Endangered Species Act of 1973 was created to help protect the vanishing breeds. Almost 300 mammals, birds, reptiles, crustaceans, plants and other life forms are officially protected on the U.S. List of Endangered Species. More than 500 foreign species are listed as well

Onlv two states - Hawaii

and California - have more endangered species than Florida.

Florida's Vanishing Wildlife.-a 1982 booklet put out by the Florida Cooperative Extension Service, lists 31 species in the state now considered endangered and another 13 as either threatened or under review for placement on the

list by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

A list by the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission is longer - 31 endangered. 30 threatened and 31 as species of special concern.

Many wildlife habitats have been wiped out during the past decades as Florida finds new popularity as a tourist and retirement mecca and as a^placeinlhe sun for many snowbound northerners fed up with freezing winters.

There are a lot of habitats that are reduced to just a fragment of what they once were. said Michael Bentzien. a Fish and Wildlife specialist on endangered species.

Among the victims:

-The dusky seaside sparrow, reduced to a population of only four males that cling .

World's Fair Site Is Still Jumble Of Brick, Girders

By BILL ( RIDER Associated Press W riter

NEW ORLEANS i.APi - They insist that, ram or shine, on .May 12 at l'a.m. the World's -Will openOor 184 days ready for mobs.. "ot tourists Itching to squander money.

As of today, however, it is an 82-acre mess in the middle of New Orleans, beside the .Mississippi River.

"It looks like a war zone out there but we

will be ready, absolutely." said James Brandt, vice president of planning for the Louisiana W orld Exposition.

To his eye, hidden order shines amidst the contusion as trucks splash through mud or raise clouds of dust, and some 5(M) construction workers weld, hammer, pour concrete and study blueprints At tair headquarters, set up in an ancient

warehouse which served as a makeshift hospital during the Civil War, they've got this S:!.')!' million construction job plotted in advance on paper

_ "We've even got the level of operational detail down to how many flashlights we wilL. need at each gate." said Brandt.

What cannot be plotted, with certainty, is . 'i.hether a!! t,hos.e touris<< will actually show up This tair comes barely two years after one . in Knoxville. Tenn,, and some planners fear that tamiliarity breeds contempt.

Right now. the official forecast is crowds, a lovely level ol occupancy in the 25,000 hotel-motel rooms and an invigorating infusion ol dollars    *'

When season passes went on sale at S90 for adult.'' and STii for children, S6.3 million worth were bought up front by the American Automobile .Association, the American Bus A.^.sociation and the National Tour .Association.

The rosy predictions bolster the wary unotticial outlook among people who live in New Orleans and work downtown They have vi,>-ions ot chronic traffic jams, more pickpockets, more crime and desperate >earches lor parking space,

,\> ot Nov 1. the tair had issued S45 million in construction contracts. Work is divided into

55 separate packages and monitored on a daily basis, both for budget and progress.

The huge Great Hall, known to fair employees as the Gray Hulk, was officially dedicaieda week ago by the ciLv-:which has a fond proprietary interest in it.

When the fair ends on Nov. 11.1984. and they take down the pavilions and the monorail and convert renovated warehouses into condominiums, the Gray Hulk will remain as the New Orleans Convention Center.

They say it will make New Orleans a great city. " Jazz Impresario Allen Jaffe said as he eyed the Hulk during a recent tour of the grounds. ! always thought what it took was good restaurants and jazz.

In addition to new construction, much of it temporary plastic, plaster and prefabricated steel. 27 old warehouses of honest brick, iron and cypress are being stripped and scraped. They will be sites for everything from bars to hotdog stands.

Streets and sidewalks around the one-time warehouse area are being resurfa^d. Parking meters have been rigged to .accept only quarters, no nickles or dimes.

Since .May, the middle of the city has been racked .and torn by, an .pi million repaving project uptown and in the French Quarter. Mayor Dutch Morial said it is about one-third complete.

Eleven countries, plus the Vatican and the United States, have signed on for exhibits. Winston Lil, in planning, said the fair expects to announce several more soon, Brandi said the fair is in negotiation with 22 additional countries.

The Oriental pavilions are being done by-Japan. the People's Republic of China, anil South Korea. Other countries invovled: Canada, Australia. France, Israel. Italy. Mexico, El Salvador and Liberia.

The Common .Market combine, to cooperate on one pavilion, includes the United Kingdom. Luxembourg. Ireland. Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, West Germany and Greece. They will share space in the International Pavilion.

Millcman

Still Makes Deliveries

NASHVILLE, Tenn i.APi When John Blackman says he will deliver, he means It .\i;d his customers lap it up, Blackman is one ot 15 home delivery, honest to Joodness. milkmen - from Nashville's Purity Dairies.

He's up about 2 a m and on his route by a little after 4 a m . delivering the full Purity line to about .500 customers in the the suburban Tusculum area 'Tve .seen the kids grow up in some ot these houses. the t;4-year old milkman said, adjusting his Purity hat and deftly switching gears during a route delivery this week 'I really like seeing the people. Most ol them are so nice " Blackman, who has been on the same route for about 21 years, has seen the glass miik bottles and the crushed ice trucks fall by the wayside to give way to electrically-cooled trucks and yellow plastic milk jugs.

Other changes are in the kind ot milk people drink nowadays, he said,

' People are a lot more diet conscious.' he said. We sell a lot ol skim milk and the

acidophilus - that's what I drink.''

Convenience is the main reason about 9.000 homes in Davidson County have their milk delivered. Blackman said, "It's a little more expensive for the service, but convenience is the thing.

"A lot of people think we don't have anything but milk. he said, going down the list of items available on home delivery basis - cottage cheese, sour cream, orange juice, punch? dishwashing detergent, laundry powder, sausage, and for the holiday season, fruitcakes, cookies and, of course, eggnog and boiled custard,

I'm just a rolling grocery store, "helaughed.

"We have a lot to do besides deliver. We knock on doors to get new customers. We are always doing that, he said, explaining, that Purity management sponsors contests among the route men to provide incentives for adding new customers.

Convenience is the reason we have home delivery. John just brings the milk by, and I

School Menus

.Menus tor Pitt County schools this week as announced are: Monday - hot dog on bun. french fries, catsup, coleslaw and milk,

Tuesday - spaghetti with meat sauce, tos,sed salad, buttered corn, trench bread and milk.

Wednesday - chicken and pastry , candied yams, seasoned green beans."hushpuppies and milk

Thursday - sausage and shells, garden peas, applesauce, cheese biscuits and milk,

Friday - fish sandwich, french fries, catsup, coleslaw and milk.

I

don't have to fool with it, said S.W. Harlow, who has been on Blackman's route for a number of years.

A lot of people go to the grocery every day. We don't

- we go every "two weeks, once a month, this service is great. They dont make 'em no better than John, said Harlow.

The day is a long one for Blackman, who begins with a devotional and Bible reading, then dashes to the Purity Plant where he picks up his truck, makes his rounds, returns to the plant in the mid-or late afternoon to do paperwork and load for the next day. and then heads home for dinner and cookies and milk.

But I like it. I like being outside, and 1 like the exercise. I will say it takes a dedicated wife to put up with the hours. he said.

The route, with its 500 weekly or bi-weekly customers, pushes Blackman on a tight schedule, especially for a man with an artificial hip which he has had for about 10 yeark. since arthritis threatened to permanently disable him.

I can't run much anymore like these young guys do. It takes me a little longer," he said after making one of about 200 daily trips in and out of his truck

- including some stops where he takes the milk or other products into the home and places them in the refrigerator.

He really tries to please. said Polly Roberts, director of Pollys Day Care Center. The children love him. He comes in with a smile and always has something nice to say. I think Purity is lucky to have him '

I

to life at a Disney World zoo where scientists hope to preserve the species by using a closely related subspecies.

-The Florida panther, recently dubbed Florida's state animal, numbers less than 30, eking out a perilous existence in the Everglades and Big Cypress National Preserve.

-The tiny Key deer, which once thrived in the Keys but now number less than 4007 falling both to development and free-roaming dogs,

-The manatee, the docile, curious mammal whose population hovers around 1,000. most often victims of motorboats speeding across warm Florida waterways.

^The American crocodile, reduced to perhaps a dozen breeding females in southern Biscayne Bay and in eastern

Florida Bav._________

Aimed at preventing further habitat destruction, the Endangered Species Act requires government construction projects to be examined for environmental impact, said Bentzien's co-worker, David Peterson, Another section prohibits taking. killing, harassment or anything else that might threaten one of the

fragile species, Peterson said.

The American alligator is considered as one species aided by the Engandered Species Act. Once dwindling in number, the alligator has made a comeback. It was listed as endangered in Florida until 1979, then reduced to threatened status. There is a move to take it off the threatened list as well.

Anyone can petition to place a species of plant or animal on the endangered list. Substantial material on

present and past distribution, estimated numbers and natural history must be provided for review by the Fish and Wildlife Service.

"We have several things we are operating on now under petition. Bentzien said.

Two of these are rare beach mice found along Florida's northern Gulf Coast, the Perdido beach mouse and the Choctawhatchee beach mouse.

"The mice live in the sand dunes and the sand dunes are

desirable for residential and commercial development." said Robin Fields, a Fish and Wildlife staffer reviewing the rodents.

A biologist who studied the Perdido beach mice two years ago hypothesized that "there were only 75 of the animals, "shesaid.

In four years. Bentzien said, he has handled about two dozen proposals on threatened wildlife. Not all of them evoke the same emotion as the bald eagle or Key deer, but all are important in

their own. unique, ecological way. he said,

'Basically, we are required to do th'mgs on the basis of threat. Bentzien said. There are a lot of freshwater mussels that wouldn't get a lot of interest from anyone.

Some are popular. Some are not so popular.

Peterson said the best way to gauge the public's empathy for an animal listed as enda^figered is^ to use an age-old criteria: Does it haveevelashesi

Parson Of Hills' Already At Work

HICKORY, N.C. i.AP) - Christmas is still two weeks away for most shoppers but for the Parson of the Hills. the Christmas season began two months ago and wont end until early spring.

Every falT, the Rev. Charles Keyes of Hickory - known as the Parson of the Hills - starts collecting'toys. clothes and food to give to thousands of needy children. Then the white-bearded Keyes loads the presents into his van and delivers them throughout Appalachia.

To a lot of mountain children. I am Santa Claus, the only-one who brings them anything Christmas morning. Keyes said. "A lot of these children dont have a toy. don't have any fruit or candy, don't even have warm clothes 1 try to see to it that they have a Christmas"

Keyes collects donations of food, toys and clothing at his camp for underprivileged children on the outskirts of Hickory

and at a Parson of the Hills trailer in Charlotte. ^ The Christmas bounty, which pours in from all over the nation, is stored in a warehouse at the camp, where it is loaded into vans and trucks to be delivered in five stales from North CarolihafoWesI Virgmial

Keyes, 65, has been helping poor mountain people for more than 50 years. He opened his first mission house in his native West Jefferson in the western North Carolina mountains when he was 13. With the help of a dozen, other boys, he collected food for needy families and delivered it on foot and by mule.

'"A lot of people in the mountains back then didn't have anything to eat. but they weren't about to ask anybody for anything. he said. "But if we just took it to them and left it for them, they would eat it. The looks of gratitude on their faces w as great payment for us '

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The Daily Reflector, Gfeenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Wedding Vows Said On Saturday

Joy Lynn Howell and Charles Keith Miller were united in marriage Saturday at 2 p m. in the Gethsemane Pentecostal Holiness Church. The Rev Dannv Nelson Jr

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performed the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. L.H, Mizell of Simpson and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs, William K. Miller of Bethel.'

A program of wedding music,was presented by Mr. and Mrs. James Williams, soloist, and Judy Harding, pianist.

The bride was given in marriage by her parenta and escorted by her lather. She wore a formal gown ot white bridal crepe over peau de soie designed with an open Queen Anne neckline outlined in a formal patterened silk Venise lace. The lull bishop styled sleeves also featured the silk lace enhancing the fitted cuffs. The .A-line skirt and chapel length train were trimmed m appliques ol silk \'enise lace. She wore^'ir fingertip^ iifusron veil held in place by a Camelot headpiece trimmed in lace to complement her gown

The matron ol honor was Rhonda Jackson ot Stokes.

MRS CHARLES KEITH MILLER

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with capelet sleeves. It had a detachable flower lor a bustle el tect.

Bridesmaids included Melinda .Miller of Be'hel. sister ot the bridegroom, and Bonnie Clark ol Plymouth, cousin of the bride. They wore gowns identical to that of the honor attendant.

Mothers of the bridal couple each wore a formal gown.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included Ken .Nelson and William Boyd of Greenville and William Mizell ol Simpson, brother of the bride.

A cake-cutting was held fier the wedding rehearsal in the church fellowship hall.

The couple will live in Greenville alter a Wedding trip to unannounced points.

The bride is employed at Shop-Eze Foodland and the bridegriKim works at Harris Supermarket.

The Welcome Wagon Club of Greenville will have its luncheon meeting Wednesday at 11:20 a.m. at the Brook-Valley Country Club.

The program will be a Christmas performance by the Boys Choir ol Greenville.

Reservtions must f)e made by 9 p.m. .Monday by contacting Stephanie evancho at 7.50-7846.

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A fashion show of A. Taylor originals by Danny R. Taylor of Kinston will be the special feature of the Greenville Christian Women's Club luncheon.

The luncheon will be held at the Greenville Counlr^v Club Dec. 20 from, 11,:30 a.i|i. to 1:30 p.m.    'j

Philip Evancho. artist in residence at Pitt Community College, will be the guest soloist. Judy Earnheart ot Greensboro will be the guest speaker.

All area women are invited and a tree nursery is ottered by reservations at the First Christian Church. For reservations tor the nursery and luncheon call Faye Barber at 7.56-3610 or June Johnson at 752-5810.

It's party time throughout the land and mingling with the throngs of holiday revelers are some of the most despicable g,uests known to a hostess.

From ail appearances, they-!ook like any other prtygoer . . . smiling, laughing, making small talk, but underneath it all is a larcenous human being making plans to plunder your color-coordinated buffet.

Theres the Tomato Leech. He stands at the salad bowlrwielding tongs like a penny-arcade crane that is after the diamond ring. Only he's after

Theres the Olive Freak, a trusted family friend whom you have welcomed into your home and inner circle of friends, only to have him rape the cold vegetable plate of every olive on it. All that is left is a pile of pits. , ^

Theres the Nut Poacher who never grabs a handful of nuts and takes his chances like other guests. Oh no, he pokes around selecting only the cashews that cost $6.95 a pound and doesnt stop until the only ones left are peanuts.

And wliO aiViOug you has not stared in horror as you watched the greatest poacher of them all. the

A hostess hates to stoop to the level of salad bars to discourage these marauders. I personally hate to think of puttir^ a ladle in the vinegar and oil dressing and a demitasse spoon into the expensive bluec4ieese, or of putting the mushrooms and bacon bits under a glass that severs the vein in your wrist when you reach for it, but sometimes youre forced to deal with these people on their own level.

The big problem is that you cant tell a Smoked Oyster Filcher or a Caviar Sleaze who wilL hit upon every gourmet hors

doeuvre at the party just by looking at them.

Its not until you smell their breath and see the smiles on their faces that you know youve been

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The sneak only puts one cherry tomato on his plate to cast off suspicion, but watch carefully. He pops 1 of them in his mouth as he stands at the table, leaving a salad that looks like it has just been bled.

Birth

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Born to Mr, and Mrs. Carl H unEef- WYHia ms: -207-47-Eastbrook Drive, a son. Joshua Hunter, on Dec. 5. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospi-lal.

the party, the Shrimp Pirate stakes out to see where the carved ice is to be placed. Then when the shrimp are brought in, he will position himself at the base of it like a Welcome Wagon host. He will not leave until the last shrimp is gone.

These people are subtle. Theyre clever. Theyre quick. We had a Strawberry Looter at our 'hoJuscL^-one- mghii who plucked every last strawberry but of the fruit salad before we even knew what she was doing.

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A black and white ; glossy five by seven photograph is requested : for engagement an- ! nouncements in The Daily Reflector. Eor publication ; in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.

Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

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^.|2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. December 11.1983

Nobel Panel Hails Walesa As 'Torch' For Freedom

By WILLIAM C. MAW Associated Press Writer

OSLO. Nonvay (AP) - The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the 1983 Peace Prize to Solidarity leader Lech Walesa in absentia Saturday, honoring him for raising the "burning torch" of mans inextinguishable longing for freedom.

Applause thundered through Oslo Universitys Aula Hall as Danuta Walesa, her 13-year-old son at her side, stepped to the dais to accept the medal and toread the acceptance speech in which her husband urged continued non-violent struggle for free labor unions and human solidarity.

After one of the most enthusiastically received Nobel speeches in recent years, the crowd rose to its feet, _ijs rhythmic applause bringing Mrs. Walsa back to the dais from her front-row seat for a bow.

Walesa, who remained at home in the Polish port of Gdansk where his now-outlawed labor movement was born, listened

to a broadcast of the speech with tears in his eyes and said the prize was not just for him but for all the unnamed heroes" of the struggle.

"I do regret missing the ceremony, but I could not afford to take the risk," he told reporters in his home, repeating his fear that Polands Communist authorities would not have let him return it he had gone to Oslo to collect the prize. He also said he must not leave the country^ while Polish activists remain in jail.    ,    .

Mrs. Walesa heard Egil Aavik, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, praise her husband as a champion of human rights dedicated to non-violence. She then went fonvard to accepted a blue leather box containing the Nobel gold medal, and a blue leather-covered diploma recognizing his honor. Bogdan Walesa, wearing a tuxedo, stood at his mothers side.

In his speech, which Mrs. Walesa read in Polish, the Solidarity leader appealed for reconciliation and respect for

the dignity of labor. The speech made few direct references to the tactics with which the Polish government has countered his movement, the Soviet blocs only independent union.

In one such reference, however, he said:

With deep sorrow I think of those who paid with their lives for their loyalty to Solidarity, of those who are behind prison bars and who are victims of repression. 1 think of all those with whom I have traveled the same road and with whom 1 share the trials and tribulations of our time.

Walesa, 40, was a prisoner for 11 months after a martial law crackdown on his lO-million-member movements activities Dec. 13,1981.

In the speech, Walesa said he and "the millions of my brothers" in Poland "are fighting for the right of the working people to organize and for the dignity of human labor.

"We respect the dignity and the rights of every man and every nation. The road to a brighter future for the world leads through honest reconciliation of conflicting interests and not

through hatred and bloodshed. To follow that mi means to enhance the moral power of the all-embracing idea of human

Mrs. Walesa paused periodically in her reading to allow a

translator to give the a Norwegian-language version.

Aarvik said the prize was an expression of gratitude tor the peaceful courage (Walesa) showed" in choosing peaceful confrontation over violence.

It is the committees opinion that he stands as an inspiration and a shining example to all those who. under different conditions, fight for freedom and humanity. Aarvik

said.    ^    .    .

With the union banned. Walesa cannot be seen as victorious now, he said, but he is a victor in the eyes of the ordinary worker or farm laborer. He is a victor in the eyes of the people and their church. And he is one of the great spokesmen in the world today for the longing for freedom that can never be silenced. ..

Walesa Listens As Award Given

Nobel Peace Pn/.e laureate i.ech Walesa, with his eyes almost clsed. stands in a church in Gdansk, Poland, Saturday as he listens to the short-wave broadcast from Oslo as his wife, Danuta, accepted his award. .Mrs. Walesa is shown at right

holding the award. She read an acceptance speech for Walesa, who said he was afraid the Polish government would not allow him to return home if he accepted the prize personally. (AP Laserphotos)

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Five Americans, Brifon Get Nobel Awards

SToCKHOL.M. Sweden ,\F Five Americans and a Briton were presented Nobel prizes in science, economics and literature Satur-da> on the 15(ith anniversary ot the birth ot Altred Nobei. originator of the awards I sually the music accompanying the presentation ceremony is trom the countries of the recipients But this year in a tribute to Nobel, the orchestra played music trom Sweden where Nobel was born in 1833. from Russia where he grew up. trom France where he lived for 20 years and trom Italy where he died Dec to, 189(i Nobel invented dynamite.

The chairman of the Nobel Foundation, Sune Bergstrom, said Nobel's will stipulated his "express wish

that in awarding the prizes no consideration whatever shall be given to the nationality ()t the candidates, but that ttie most worthy shall receive the prize ,.

This year's winners were; William Golding ot Britain, the prize in literature; Barbara McClintock ot New York, the prize in medicine. William Fowler of Pasadena, Calif., and Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar ot (hicago, the prize in physics; Henry Taube ot Palo Alto, Calit, the prize in chemistry, and Gerard Debreu oi Los Angeles, the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science

The winners gave their traditional Nobel lectures in their specialties in the days preceding .Saturday s award ceremonv

Each prize carried a stipend ot $190,000. The checks, plus gold medals and diplomas..were presented by King Carl Gustaf ot Sweden. The prize-winners were introduced by Swedish colleagues of the laureates.

Dr Lars Gyllensten, secretary of the Swedish Academy of Letters, said that Golding,

author of "Lord of the Flies" and other works, "has a very keen sight and sharp pen when it comes to the evil and baseness of human beings.

"However all is not black in the William Goldings imagined world" Gyllensten said, adding that "according to him. man has two

characteristics the ability to murder is one, belief in God the other,"

"Goldings novels are not only somter moralities and dark myths about evil... but also colorful tales of adventure. full of narrative joy, inventiveness, excitement and streaks of humor.

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Greek Monks Live In Remote Mountain Monasteries

V!5(-. C.'KI

rAVv

x.r6monySilhouetted

OFFKRING TO GOD , Father Seraphim, silhouetted agaie.st an early morning sky. descends from an outdoor bell tower after finishing the morning ceremony of ringing the bells as an

nffprinO tn HaH at th^ anpjAnt    OH    MvtvOfH. Th^

handful of Greek monks still remaining cling to a lifestyle established more than 1,000 years ago.

Photos By Bill Green, Quincy, Mass, Patriot Ledger

By The Associated Press

MOHMNt; FRAVKK ... A monk walks through an archway on his way to morning prayer in an ancient monastery upon the imposing rocks of Meteora in northern (ireece.

The' inaccessibilit\ ol the terrain made lor a perfect refuge for Orthodox monks loresakiiig the world in the hope ol li\ing perfect Christian fixes. 5

_._Greek Orthodox monks still cling to a lifestyle established' 1,000 years ago at monasteries on the imposing rocks of Meteora in northern Greece.

' The wildness and inaccessibility^f the terrain made Meteora the refuge of men

monasteries could be reached only by nets suspended by rope to the daring visitor.

Twenty-four monasteries once housed hundreds of monks. Now only five are in use. The Monastery of the Holy Trinity is

fleeing marauders who invaded Thessaly home for two of the remaining monks,

for centuries. The rocks provided safety. Later^ Orthodox monks forsaking the world chose to live on \ the isolated summits in hopes of seeing God more clearly and of living more perfect Christian lives.

; In the beginning these hermits prayed alone in primitive chapels. Gradually, they joined forces and built the monasteries. Until recently, the

Father Christopher Seraphim.

and Father

1

Their days are spent in prayer and in repairing the monastery which needs constant restoration because of its age.

We are blessed to be able to live between heaven and Earth, Father Seraphim said. Our lives are rich, we have blue sky and full hearts.

The Moiiasteix ol

BETWKEN HEAVEN AM) EAHTH Rousanou hangs precariously in the mountains of northern Greece. Meteora, crowned with the ancient monasteries, first

became a refuge lor men lleeinu various mxadeis and latei became a quiet hax en aw ax from worldix cares lor (ii eek monks.

^lOIA IA.\I)EES IN THE HEAVENS . . . *|-'ather (.'hrisustumos lights a holy candle *diefore evening mass in an ancient monastery

in the mountains of northern Greece. The ancient monasteries built upon the rocks today still serves a handful of Orthodox monks.

A Place To Pray

PRAYER IN AN ANCIENT MONASTERY . . . Father Seraphim prays in an ancient monastery high up in the rugged rock terrain of Meteora in the northern mountains of Greece.

The black-robed monk is contrasted against the rough whitewashed walls of the building.

1

T

\ *

I





EBaBoecs

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. December 11,1983    C-7

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Miner Prefers His Hand Tool To Technology

ByBOBDVOKCIIAK Associated Press Writer

TIPPLETOWN, Pa. (AP) - In a computerized, mechanized world. Terrence Johnston still mines coal the old way - shoveling his livelihood by hand into oaken buggies pulled along rusty rails by two sturdy ponies.

Simplicity is a virtue, and this is about as simplistic as you can get." says the craggy-faced Johnston. 56. picking at a coat rib inside a 48-inch high tunnel that is pitch black except for the intrusion of his miners light.

If something goes haywire with that expensive, complicated machinery, youd have to shut down to fix it. he

adds, toiling on his knees 700 feet inside the earth with 800 feet of rock over his head. "These ponies are very quiet, very.

reliable. They reouire a minimum of care. Just give them a little hay and a little oats, and away they go

Twenty years ago. Johnston hacked this one-man. two-pony mine out of a rocky mountain seven-tenths of a mile from the nearest paved road about 11 miles outside of Altoona He survives in a technological time warp, despite onerous regulations and pressures to conform He mines about 50 tons of coal a month - a modern machine can shovel that much in a single scoop - to burn in home furnaces. It sells for $25 a ton. although 40 percent of that goes for taxes and royalties to the people he leases from.

"Its nothing to brag about, but it's good enough for me. ' savs Johnston, wearing a rascally grin. "Some people are dissatisfied with their work. Me. I'm perfectly comfortable and quite content. Im here by choice. I'm just as happy as if I had good sense."

The ponies ferry Johnston inside to the coal seam To walk, you must stoop at the waist, but you still smack your head and back on the sandstone ceiling, in places, horse hairs cling to the roof, evidence that even the tiny ponies have just enough clearance.

Ever since I can remember. 1 wanted to be underground. Im just at home here." says the wiry Johnston, who wears foam rubber knee pads while using a hand auger to prepare the next day 's dynamite charge.

Near the portal, his one-story house, where his wife and two daughters live, has a tar paper roof and tar paper siding with an outside toilet. He has no television and no phone, using gas to light the inside. He picks up his mail once a week, driving in a baby blue 1973 Plymouth Fury that shows its age.

"According to the government, we're probably considered poverty. IPs about the last word irrdrudgery: VVe're on the bottom rung." says Johnston, dressed in coveralls and wearing a hard hat.

"But it's relative. They tell me there are thousands ot kids in New York City who have no home at all Compared to

them, we re doing OK, 11 we need an extra buck, we go in and load an extra car of coal. I'll tell you very Irankly. the banks hate us. We don't owe them a cent." he adds.

"You'd have to be out of your.Jiead to like it. But the interior disposition is what counts. You can wear rags and be happy. You can have all the money in t.he world and worry about who's going to.steal it."Johnston says.

Mules and horses were once the mam mode of hauling coal from underground. But mines like Johnston s are virtually extinct, made obsolete by machines and driven out of business by federal regulations mandating things like telephones and toilets inside the mine and expensive breathing machines for each miner

'Since 1976. Johnston has been removed from federal overview because he works alone and his coal is not interstate commerce. However. Pennsylvania inspectors routinely check his mine for such things as proper ventilation, gas buildups and root strength

"H's a throwback to the way the industry was when it was " tnitiailr startedMn the 1800s.- He's a^mdependenr as he can~ be. He doesn't want anything from anybody He just wants to make a living on his own, " says mine inspector Lynn Jamison "When he's gone, there won t be any more horses in the mines

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Bush Zoo Survives In Africa

15\ TOM BALDWIN

Associated Press Writer

HINDU. South-West Atnca AF' - Along the banks of. the crocodile-intested Okavango River, where some ol Africa's greatest beasts gathered freely before the region was torn by war. one finds a zoo.

Wire cages, at the end of a tutted lane reflect the determination ot both civilians and soldiers to persuade tribesmen to reduce their killing 01, game for food. Despite -the pressures of drought and the dislocations ot war, the zoo director says, the message of conservation seems to be taking hold.

There is a friendly female lion named Yanna next to a shy cheetah, a red-eyed hyena, two crocodiles, several monkeys, birds, snakes, brawling baboons and a gems'bok. or antelope, named Susan Susan lost her left horn in a tight wit'h a lion and hvf rihi    wild

dogs.

"Yes, It s kind of a strange place tor g zoo, here in the ildernebs, iuokiiig slraighr across that river into Angola, and being in the war." zoo director Elric Pretorius said in an interview. Susan tollows his steps like a loyal dog.

Pretorius. a trained anthropologist and psychologist from Cape Town. South Africa, came to the banks of the Okavango luyears ago to work with tribesmen of the same name.

For 17 years, black nationalist guerrillas of the .South-West Africa People's Organization have been lighting white-ruled South Africa's administration of the territory also known as Namibia. Rundu is in northeastern Namibia, where the river forms the boundary with Angola and where South Atncan soldiers regularly scout tor guerrillas moving south from .Angolan camps.

When Pretorius arrived, many of the region's llii.ooo Okavangos were being caught in the middle Fighting and harassment by combatants were forcing 95 percent ot the widely distributed okavangos to move to within nine miles ot the river,

T-he South Africans were building roads and clinics in the area, and were ottering jobs, and there was still plenty ot game,

"The okavangos looked at an animal and they saw lunch They were killing everything." Pretonus said.

As the chief teacher in Rundu. Pretorius said he tried - and tailed - to use the classroom to teach ecology and animal husbandry

"They still went on killing.' he said "There were more and more people and les> and less game We wanted to show that it they allowed an animal to live, it could reproduce and there would be more game tor everyone Then the idea ot the bush zoo emerged as a way to demonstrate the advantages ot conservation. Pretorius and some other teachers urged the civilian South Afri-can administration to establish the zoo The first animals were the wounded and the ill recovered by South African troops. Yanna. the lion, had been a house pet The government provided cages Okavango children were encouraged to gather teed Today, youngsters work alongside adults to care tor the creatures A South African military veterinarian makes monthlv visits.

I





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years. They have ceased to expect anything of each other (or, perhaps, of life), and in ceasing to exped. have ceased to talk. 0)mmunicatk)n refreshes; a lack of it finally benumbs the sufferers.

In the case of this couple, their one subject of conversation is how to separate; the fences of habit hold them where neither wants to be, and in their effort to scale them, they only get lone

lier.

I have never led a life that was more than briefly domestic at least according to the accepted definition of domesticity. That fact seems merely inter-

r, but there were times when it seemed panful. How one peoples ones fantasies is a deierinining element in loneliness. When mine ceased to be so nuclearly domestic, I ceasi to feel lonely. In my case, a factor mav t>e that I am a novelist, a professional fan tasizer. If all the real people walk out on me, as they have on occasion, 1 oan always people my head with characters.

It iTidy be though it is'a dark thot^t that an overfondness for the companionship of my characters caused some of the real people in ni\ life to walk out. A novelist walks a fine line; Withdraw too successfully into tfie company of the spirits you create and

How one peopks one's kaoaaiesisa determining element in tlw oonttkm otdled loneliness.

your flesh-and-blood loved ones may conclude that you dont need them or that you need thn less than those people whom you make up. It is possible to need both the real and the im agined; whether it is possible to do so equally is hard to judge. Needs are seldom weighed that precisely.

Imagining people is a profoundly .y -ductive habit. It is when I stop imagining them i.e., when I end a novel and let a given group go that I hav e felt most lonely. A few years ago, I delivered up a trilogy that enabled me to write about the same characters for some 10 years. Having them around to write about lent a sense of cohesion to a life otherwise not very cohesive; letting them go was such a wrench th.it I recalled a couple of my favorites in tfu book Somebodys Daiim. Imagined characters have an appealing stabilitv which friends in ones daily existence are hard put to match.

Finally, I seldom fear loneliness because I have one habit even more sc* ductive than im^ning people (well competitive with it, at least), and that ts reading. For me. reading is both tfie stablest pleasure and the ultimate reassurance that there will always be com pany. I have 8,0(X) potential friends in my ranch house in Texas.

Despite strenuous efforts, it doesn t seem possible to get enough of reading And perhaps because I wul never have sufficient time to become weary of the companionship good books. HI always have a buffer between myself and loneliness. iW

Larry McMurtry is the coMhor o/The Last Piciur. Show, the triktgy Moving On. All My Friends An Going To Be Strangers and Terms of Endear ment, and severat other novels. His rm^ reiem unrk IS The Desert Rose (Sanon & Schusterl

6 Familywekly DECiMBiJt II I9M





[)-4 TUgOaily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunflay. December 11.1983Winter Favorite Time For Five Men Alone On Mount Washington

Bv.MILLV.MiLEW

MOL'NT WASHINGTON. N H. <UPI - The wind howls incessanliy. The temperatures hover below freezing as a dense, cold f(^ whips and swirls in the steady roar But for the five men who live and work for the seven worst months atop Mount Washington, the highest peak in in -Northeast, it s the best time of the year Inside, endless boxes of pancake mix. shelves ol canned soup and roll upon roll of toilet paper fill the {Mntry I nu.sed doors and windows are sealed tight with silicone Seven months worth ot drinking water is stored in eight 2.ju>gallon tanks

While some people "on the ground may view the approaching winter with dread, those who keep the vveather charts and perform ice experiments in the observatory on top of the 6.288-foot peak relish the loo mph winds and temperatures ihat have dropped a< low as -iT below zero I ve t)een ready tor winter since June." said Kenneth Rancourt. at ki. the youngest ot the ti\-e men ot the mountain. "Being in a state-owned b^uilding. we give a lot ot tours in the summer

"A lot of our work is research^)rented. It takes time and effort. In the summer we re always pressed for time. In the w inter, its quieter, easier to think "

Greg Gordon, the resident photographer, said the mountain's greatest appeal is "its isolation and the severity of its weather. Both are more pronounced in winter. It's a wild place'

The c(^ railway and the auto road up the mountain closed last month Wooden poles line the road so the obsenatory crew can find its way on a snow cat when snow drifts up to 25 feet above the pavement With the park building sealed off. the obsenatcwy living quarters and the weather-communications center at the top of the mountain are ready to face the winrer Each two-or three-member crew at the non-profit observatory works an 8-da\ stmt - 12 hours on and 12 hours off On Wednesdays', the command changes and the crew descends for a 6-day break below. Some members rejoin families who live in the valley "It's comparable to submarine service." Rancourt said

Places To Ski

BAKE Bl{ \\( II TIME \(. \I\ - \> the Iasi of the bright aiituiiui leaves fall to the groiiml. the lime of hare tree branches return.

Defoliated trees and a string of recent coid nights confirm that winter is almost here again. i Reflector Photo In Jerry Ray non

By BRIAN .MALLOY _

I nitrt Press International

For those of you who dream of spending your vacation schussing down steep slopes with powder up to your knees and beautiful vistas stretched out in front of you - but it just seems beyond your reach - do not despair

A skiing vacation does not necessarily mean Vail. .Aspen and Sun Valley. There also are Snow shoe. Camelback and Brandywine in .New England.

One week in one of the finer Rocky Mountain resorts can quite easily run up to Sl.iMJO per person, including airfare, hotel and meals. A week in one of the eastern resorts can cost less than half that.

There is a reason why those western names have become almost mystical enticements to the devoted skier. With up to luo times as much snowfall as elsewhere, the Rockies and other western ranges can just about guarantee that dreamy powder.

But powder skiing is not the only kind. In fact, there is the argument that it-is actually easier than most of the skiing the more hardened veterans of the slopes near home can boast, and therefore not as much fun

Henry Barlow, skiing expert and author of "Aspen to Whitefish. a Skier s Guide to Rockies." can atte ' to that tact. A dedicated westerner. Barlow spent last winter m the more eastern resorts for Skiing magazine, testing the slopes.

"It Is a different world. People talk about so much the west, but it was great " Barlow said from his home in Crested Butte.

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We get along because we share comnion interests. You do have some problems We complain about each other's cooking.'

The off-duty person is frequently called out to perform search and rescue missions, especially in early spring when more hikers and skiers brave the mountain

Gordon said the public always asks how they gel along because they imagine men cooped, "getting short tempered, lonely, pacii^ the Hoor" in the confined quarters "But it s not like that." he insisted "We have plenty of space, plenty of things to do People work here because they want to You never get fired of it."

"You drop everything and go. Rancourt said "When you arrive at the site, you have to be prepared for whatever you*, see You have to make quick, good decisions.

The mountain had its first dusting of snow in late September, but the phone calls trom the public don f start escalating until it snows below

The observatory schedule regularly requires outdoor work The on-duty person records weather data every three hours -some of the worst in the world .Next April, the observatory willcelebrate the 50th anniversary of the highest w ind speed ever recorded anyw here: 231 mph The on-duty person also monitors federally funded ice experiments, broadcasts weather reports for radio stations

"It's always, is it really snowing up there Rancourt said "We also get calls from Georgia saying. It's &5 here What's it like there' "

In w inter, the answ er is often "20 below zero The men who work on the mountain have varied backgrounds; meteorology, public education, engineering, search and rescue But ihev all need one common trait

and de-ices thei^communications tower once an hour during the worst of the w inter,

"You have to suit up. climb to the top ot the tower and physically knock ice off with a crowbar. Rancourt said

"You have to be ready to accept whatever happens.' Rancourt said Heavy snow and icev,mav prevent you trom getting down on a Wednesday w hen your shift ends "Or even a Thursday. Friday or Saturday "

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Pi

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983Taxpayers Union Balks At Oregon Inlet Jetties Plan

B) United Press International Mymg taxpayers could take a $600 million bath at Oregon Imet. the National Taxpayers Union has praised a recent effort by 28 congressmen to kill legislation that would authorize the construction of a pair of jetties at the inlet.

In a news release received Saturday, the Washington-based group said documents from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers indicated construction of the jetties to stabilize Oregon Inlet could cost up to $114 million. Corps documents indicate the cost of maintaining the jetties through their projected 50-year life could exceed $600 million, the group said.

it is not just the beaches of Cape Hatteras National Seashore and Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge that are at stake, said Jill Lancelot, director of the 120.000-member organiMtion interested in reducing government spending and taxes. "The American taxpayer is in jeopardy of fcing forced to take a $600 million bath at Oregon Inlet."

The 28 congressmen opposed to the jetties have urged the House interior Committee to kill legislation that would authorize them. The drive is being led by Rep. Silvio Conte. R-Mass.. the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee and a frequent opponent of expensive water projects.

In a letter to Interior Committee Chairman Morris K.

Udall, D-Ariz., the congressmen said the jetties would affront the eyes of hundreds of thousands of visitors annually.

They also pointed out that in September 1982, Army Assistant Secretary William R. Gianelli "acknowledged that a fundamental error had been made in the projects economic justification.

The Corps, which had said the economic benefit of the jetties should be about $1.15 for each $1 invested, later cut its cost-benefit ratio to about 89 cents for each $1 invested.

The jetties have been long sought by commercial fishermen, promoters of a seafood industrial part and Rep.

Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., who represents the northeastern area of the state.

They are intended to establish a deepened and stabilized channel through the constantly shifting inlet and to assure continued access to the fishing docks at Wanchese.

A scientific panel commissioned by the National Park Service has expressed doubts whether the jetties would work, and has said they would cause serious erosion to public beaches beyond the inlet.

The jetties also are opposed by other groups, including the National Wildlife Federation, the National Audubon Society and the Sierra Club,

In an effort to neutralize opposition to the jetties. Jones has attached the project proposal to a bill to expand federal acquisition of wetlands for conservation. He has said he believes there is a reasonably good chance the measure can win key approval from the Interior subcommittee chaired by Rep. John F. Seiberiing Jr.. D-Ohio. early next year.

But Ms. Lancelot said that may be as far as the project gets. She said the project may s*ill face stiff opposition when

it comes before the Appropriations Committee for funding. "Theres a pointed message for the proponents in the fact

that-eight of the 28 letter signers are members of the House Appropriations Committee. ' she said.

Two Face Execution In Georgia This Week

ATLANTA (AP) -Georgia's electric chair, which set a grisly national

record before it shut down 19 years ago, is being readied

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RING THE BELLS, A Joyous Christmas Cantata by Harry Bollback and Don Wyrtzen. Directed by Pam Smith. Let this be a part of your celebration of Christmas.

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for as many as two executions this week as appeals for the Condemned men wind down.

Convicted killer John Eldon Smith, whose execution date is Thursday, has appealed for clemency to the state Board of Pardons and Paroles.

Under Georgias new constitution, only the Board of Pardons and Paroles has the final power to commute a sentence. Appeals to the board are made "after it appears that all appeals have ceased or been exhausted, said attorney Garland T. Byrd, who defended Smith in his 1975 trial.

Smith, convicted in the 1974 murder-for-profit of two newlyweds, was spared from two previous execution dates this year by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. But that court cleared the way for Thursdays scheduled execution after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected Smiths appeal.

Convicted murderer Alpha Otis Stephens, scheduled to die Wednesday, lost a bid for a stay last week before the same federal appeals court, but his attorneys petitioned Saturday for a rehearing before the full court. Other appeals procedures also-remained open to his attorneys.

Stephens was convicted in the 1974 slaying of a Macon contractor who. according to trial testimony, interrupted Stephens in a burglary at the Twiggs County home of the victim's son.

A third man originally scheduled tor execution this week. William Kenny

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Stephens, won a stay Friday from a federal judge in Augusta. He was to die Monday for the 1979 slaying of a Richmond County sheriffs investigator who had been seeking him for questioning about a series of burglaries.

The instrument of execution is a sturdy wooden chair in which 415 people have died since electrocution replaced hanging in Georgia in 1924.

Painted glossy white, the chair sits over a rubber pad on a raised platform in a 10-by-20-foot, beige execution chamber at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center near Jackson, south of Atlanta. It was moved there from the slate prison at Reidsville in 198(1.

Georgia set a national record by executing 215 people between 194(1 and 1%(1. but no one has been executed in the state since (let. Id 1964. when Bernard Dye, a 84-year-old McDuffie County mechanic, was led to the (jhair protesting liis innocence in the slaying of a neighbor.

He was strapped into the chair at 11:10 a.m. that Friday and was pronounced dead t 11:18 a.m.

Executions were stopped as a national debated mounted over the death penalty. A 1972 U.S. Supreme Court' decision overturned the death penalty laws of most states.

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Q.12 Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Israel Shares Its Technology On Desert Water

Bv WESLKV (i. PIPPERT

TEL .AVIV, Israel lUPI - Israel has finished carving streams in the desert and now is sharing its agricultural technology with the United States, China and even Saudi Arabia.

Israel has developed an irrigation system that makes better use of water than even a gentle spring rain. It has the biggest such project in the world under way in Arizona.

Much more surprisingly. Rafi Click, director of the Israel Agriculture Center, said Saudi Arabia is buying Israeli irrigation equipment through European dealers - even though the Saudis are committed to the Arab boycott of Israel.

Israeli experts also have visited China to advise on the use ol Israeli equipment, although China does not formally recognize Israel.

Looking at a prototype dractor that goes backwards, forwards, sideways and in circles with equal dexterity. Click talked about the advances Israel has made in agriculture.

Israel produces between five and 10 times as much fruit and vegetables as in the late 1940s. It exports $900 million year in Jaffa oranges, avocados, tomatoes, other fruits and wegetables-=^nd .noi^:,-agricbemicals-and iamuequipmenL like drip irrigation systems.

Israel's farm imports are valued at about $8(Ki million, mostly feed grains, giving it a net in agricultural balance of payments.

"This is a great achievement - JO years ago we had nothing.'' said Click, a husky ex-farm boy born in Israel and raised on a kibbutz.

Then, he said, the challenge was to take water to the desert and make it bloom. This has been accomplished, as Isaiah predicted.

\Ve now have no more problem with water," Click said.

' Now. the problem becomes cost-effectiveness .. and finding a bigger market for our products, "

The picture is not all rosy.

Agriculture Minister-designate Pesach Crupper said in a magazine interview that because'of the low rate of exchange for Israeli currency. Israeli farmers have not been earning enough for their products abroad.

The magazine said Brazil. Mediterranean and African countries are crjeating heavy competition for Israel and many Israeli farmers are in serious financial straits.

Click, interviewed at the 9th International .Agricultural Exhibition he was hosting, said Israeli scientists found, that yield is lost because tractors and farm equipment pack the ground too heavily.

So they designed a tractor that follows the same tracks in the field year after year, leaving soil around the crops loose.

Click said this will allow two crops, like cotton and corn, to be grown in the same field in the same year - at double the profit.

The tractor has hydrostatic drive with individual steering tor each wheel that permits it to go back and forth, sideways and in a circle. The plows, cultivators, sprayers and harvesters are easily attached below the big rectangular frame. The I80-horsepower tractor costs about S80.IKH).

The prototype was made for Cranot. a regional cooperative, by Ashot Ashkelon. which formerly ma.nufactured parts for tanks    . ...........

"They're beating their swords into plowshares," Click laughed, quoting Isaiah again.

Israel's pioneer drip irrigation system uses a labyrinth network of pipes buried a few inches under ground. The moisture is released at root level at zero pressure, much less pressure than even rain.

Click said the drip system increases the efficiency of irrigation 50 per cent. Israel irrigates all ofits cotton, half by-drip, and three-fourfhs of its orchards, by spray or drip

Using drip irrigation. Arizona watered 4,ooo acres this year and is planning 10,000 acres in 1984. Click predicted the drip irrigation would spread to Callitornia.

' It's a revolution." Click said.

By doubling production through use of the tractor and drip irrigation, he said, 'maybe this could be the solution to the food crisis in the world. "

Biotech Program Aimed At Food

Bn JOHN KI.E.SI1KB Xssociated Press Writer

K.ALEIGH. N.U .AFi -At first glance. North Carolina .State University's new biotechnology program might appear little more than a combination of existing academic courses with a modern title.

But to biochemistry pro-lessor Frank Armstrong, a single grim statistic illustrates the program s

significance The Earth's population is 4 billion now and by the end ot the century it will be 6 billion, " said Armstrong. Experts have concluded that at the very minimum, the world food supply needs to be doubled by then '

In order to prevent a far worse starvation problem than today's. Third World agriculture must improve, he said. That's where the NC.SU program comes in The program is designed to coordinate biotechnological research in different areas -from biochemistry and engineering to food science and veterinary medicine.

Some :h) scientists now doing such research will be involved in the program, which will have a 15-member faculty and will offer a graduate minor in biotechnology Agricultural research is expected to gain most from the program, said Armstrong. Scientists ot various specialties and from different departments will work together, and private industry is expected to take a strong interest.

As a result, breakthroughs should come more quickly in such areas as development of crop strains resistant to insects and other environ-lental factors that have

crushed agriculture in many areas.

There's a tremendous in-terest in applying biotechnology to agriculture. " Armstrong said Industry is very-aware ot potential benefits down the road.

"It's going to take 15 or Jo years to see the tangible results, but once they start showing up. they 're going to be a boon to the whole farming^ndustry"    _

Scientists already are developing crops more resistant to flooding, drought, soil salinity, insects, bacteria and viruses. .Armstrong said. Using biological techniques, researchers study plant tissues for their ability to resist disease.

Similar methods are used to study illnesses such as hoof and mouth disease that have plagued livestock in many poor nations, he said.

Tlie new program's benefits aren't limited to improving the Third World economy. Armstrong said Because ot its emphasis on cooperation with industry, it's expected to make North Carolina and especially the Research Triangle area all the more attractive to biotechnological companies.

For example. Ciba-Ceigy Corp. of New York announced recently- that it would build a research facility in the Research Triangle Park. Mary Dell Chilton, the firm's executive director of biotechnology, has been appointed adjunct professor in the NCSl genetics department

The United States currently leads the world in biotechnological research, he added. But West Germany. Japan. England and France are struggling to catch upStruggling Economy Boosts

Prejudicial Wave In Europe

By LARKY THOKSON .Associated Press Writer

LONDON lAP) - Turkish migrant workers suffer in West Germany France has tried paying Moslem Arabs to go back to North Africa. Britain's non-whites live with pervasive discrimination in employment and housing.

An undercurrent of racial and anti-foreign prejudice is nothing new in Europe, the continent that gave birth to the fanatical anti-Semitism of Hitler, that sent its armies, traders and missionaries into the world carrying "the White Man's Burden" ot civilizing other peoples.

But as economic recession in the past decade has pushed unemployment to record levels in many countries 10.1 percent overall in the 10-nation European Common Market - foreigners and non-whites have become increasingly tempting targets.

The irony is that many migrant workers were recruited Tor "jobsm Europe 20 or Jo years ago.

The postwar - economic miracle' meant that Turks were welcomed as guest workers in West Germany, that France needed laborers from Algeria. Morocco. Spain and Portugal. Britain's labor shortage JO years ago caused it to hire West Indian blacks for London's underground trains and Indians and Pakistanis for textile mills.

Today things are different. In Britain, lor example, unemployment is running at IJ percent.

Almost all of Britain's minorities are citizens. Elsewhere in Europe, most migrant workers are long-time resident aliens with assimilated children caught in wrenching problems of dual loyalties.

In London. Amobi Modu says his Nigerian background - his father came to Britain in the.1950s - made him the butt of discrimination frorti schoolmates and teachers. "But at least my father had a good job so we did not suffer poverty '

Modu. a race relations expert in his late 20s, emphasizes that dealings between Britain's whites and 5 percent minority of non-whites were not all bad.

But there still is documented prejudice that makes life tougher for non-whites in time of economic hardship. We face overt racism, poverty and covert racism. Modu says..

Last year, a British Broadcasting Corp. study found that half of all British employers discriminate against blacks. For a TV documentary . thEBBC sent both black and white job applicants to 300 companies, and in 50 percent of the cases, the blacks were told the job had been taken while a white applicant with.equal qualifications was told the job was available.

In West Germany, with unemployment of 8.7 percent, the Turkish minority of 1.6 million is the most visible component of an estimated 4.6 million aliens, and it is the chief target of actions by extremists froip right and left. But other aliens, including black American soldiers, also have trouble.

A black GI and a black American civilian were killed along with a 21-year-old Egyptian last June when a 26-year-old neo-Nazi opened fire during a racial argument in a Nuernberg disco.

Time and again, chiefly racial motivations cause right-wing extremists to aggressively articulate their hostility against foreign workers, asylum-seekers. .NATO-assigned troops and foreign students. the West German Interior Ministry concluded in a report.

It registered 2.047 violations with "rightist extremist background," up from 1.886 in 198U

Anti-Turkish sentiment runs so high in West Germany that authorities assigned one policeman to every five spectators at a soccer match in West Berlin between a West German and a -Turkish team in October. The police were credited with forestalling violence.

The Netherlands' reputation as the most tolerant country in Europe is wearing thin With unemployment at-i7^rcent~probabl.r the highest in the industrialized world.

The major Dutch political parties were alarmed in October when the openly racist Centrumpartij won 9 percent of the vole in municipal elections in the central Dutch town of Almere.

France, with 4.A6 million foreigners registered at the end of 1982, saw the quasi-fascist National Front win a million votes in nationwide municipal elections last spring, the party's best ^showing ever. Its campaign slogan: "Two'million unemployed French is

two million immigrants too many.

In the late 197us. consenative President Valery Giscard d'Estaing offered immigranir; $1.500* to leave, but only about l2.uon accepted and many sneaked back in later.

The plan was dropped. But in West Germany, a bill considered likely to pass lakes a similar tack, offering up to $4.200 as "return aid" to tempt Turks. Yugoslavs. Koreans., Moroccans. Portuguese. Spanish and others jo go home.    !    -

In September, a group studied xenophobid attitudes in Europe for the 21-nation Council of Europe and found the most common argu; menls were that foreign workers "take jobir awav from nationals, are prone to violence^ and draw too much from state treasuries ' ; I Those altitudes were untrue and unfair, s^ij the report, prepared by Swiss lawmaker Richard Muller, It said immigration haa stabilized long before unemploy ment begani rise, that in France the crime rate among -l^th Afrieans^ -is lower- than- among^ t French and that migrants get fewer soc-iat benefits.    '    :

The study said the economic slump was ttie root cause of the ill feelings toward foreigiv ers '

All European countries expressly forbid racial dr ethnic discrimination, but not much is done on official levels to combat it. Only Britain has a government-backed mechanism - the Commission tor Racial Equality - that accepts complaints of discrimination and will assist people in taking legal action.

Children

Studying

Justice

LITTLE ROCK, Ark <APi - An employee of the attorney general's office has become a pioneer in law education for Arkansas children.

Becky Thompson created and fnanages a program that teaches ttllh-graders about the state's criminal justice system. She educates pupils throughout the state on how the criminal justice system works, who their local officials are - the police chief and municipal judge, for instance - and what the officials do.

Teaching is not new for Miss Thompson. She taught the fifth grade in .Springdale for one year. Alter that year, she began looking for a summer job. "I enjoyed teaching." she said, "but wasn't sure after the first year if that was what I wanted todo. "

Later, she worked as a secretary and clerk in then-Cov David Pryor's office. Steve Clark was Pryor's executive secretary. When Clark became attorney general. he started hiring a staff and selected Miss Thompson. 'He knew I had an education -background, and asked me if 1 wanted to do something along the lines ol law education for kids. I said yes"

"When I came to this office." Clark said. "I decided there was an important role to be played by it m terms of criminal law education for young people.' The better youngsters understand the criminal law system, he said, the less likely they are to become a victim or a defendant.

Clark said the program was one of the first m the country and has been successful. "Not a lot of state dollars havc^gdrie mfo it."" he said. "The first year, the total program cost about $32,000, which includes Becky's salary. We reached something like 57.1X10 fifth-graders." The cost averages about 30 cents a child, he said.

"If we can. by virtue of her program, keep just one young person a year from a robbery of a Road Runner or whatever, yvhere the average sentence is 7"- years, we will have paid tor her program." Clark said. It costs the state more than $5.000 a year to imprison someone, he said.

What we have found in the public school is that these young people are just like a sponge. They will absorb all this information about a misdemeanor or a felony or who is their judge." Clark said.

Furthermore, he said, the program gives fifth-graders some appreciation for the legal system that most of their parents do not have. "Their parents were never exposed to this topic or subject unless they were the victim or the defendant. In either of those cases, it is something Ihev don't like to talk about." dark said, "We really think we are strengthening the criminal justice system with this."

L





I teaspoon ground cinnamon Vi teaspoMi ground nutneg '/4 teaqMHMi ground allspice 'A teaspoon ground doves

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Brandy, bourbon or Cointreau

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then remove from heat. Reserve Vi cup of the fruit for garnish; stir remainder into orange juice mbcture.

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1 padoge (18<b ounces) ydkm cake mix (not pudding type)

4 iaigeeggs % cup cream sherry ^ cup vegetable oil

1 package (3% ounces) instant vanilia pudding mix >2 teaspoon nutmeg

Streusd Filiing (rcdpe follows)

Sherry Qaze (recipe fdiows)

Vt cup Blue Diamond* Sliced Natural Almonds, tomted

Grease and flour a Ifl-inch Bundt pan; set aside. In a large bowl, combine cake mix, eggs, sherry, oil, pudding mix and nutmeg. Mix at low speed 1 minute, scraqping bowl constantly. Mix at medium speed 3 minutes, scraping bowl occasionally (or beat by hand 5 minutes). Pour half of batter into prepared pan. Sprinkle eyenly with Streuse! Filling, Pour in remaining cake batter Bake at 350 F., 45 to 50 minutes, or until cake springs back when touched lightly. Qx>l on wire rack 15 minutes. Unmold from pan; cool completely on rack. Brush with Sherry Glaze; garnish with almonds. Makes 10 to 12 servings.    _____

Streusel Pilling: Mix 1/3 cup packed brown sugar, 1/4 cup flour, 3 tablespooiis firm butter or margarine and 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon together until crumbly. Stir in 3/4 cty) toasted Blue Diamond* Sliced Natural Almonds.

Sherry Glaze: Stir together 2 sifted powdered sugar, 1/3 ciq? melted butter <)r margarme and 1 tablespoon cream sherry. Stir in 1 to 2 teaspoons hot water, until glaze is of desired consistency.

1 paduge (10 ounca) or 2 cups Bhie Diamond*    1    cup butler

Whf^ Natural Aimonds    1    teaspotm vanilla extract

IVtcupsflour    1    cup powdered sugai; optional

% cup sugar

Measure 1-2/3 cups almonds. Whirl in blender or grind fine. Finely chop remaining almonds and set aside. Mix flour, sugar and ground almonds. With ^ers work in butter and vanilla extr^ until mixture cleans bowl. Chill about 1 hour. Roll dough into balls (about 1-1/4 inches), then into rolls (about 3-1/2 inches long), then^form into crescents. Press tops into chopped almonds. Bake on ungreased cookie sheet in 350F. (moderate) oven 12 to 15 minutes until lightly browned, ciool on pan about 10 minutes. \)^e still warm, roll in powdered sugai; if desired. Makes 25 to 30 crescents.

2 pack^ (8 ounces cream    ib    teaspoon    Worcestershire sauce

cheese, softened    2 cups Bhie Diamond* Blandied Whole

2 ian fS ounces each) pasteurized twocess cheese    Almonds, toasted

spread widi pimiento    Pine qnigs for garnish

b pound blue dieese, crumbled    Crackers

% cup minced green onkm

In large bowl with mixer at medium speed, beat cream cheese, cheese spread with pimiento and bhie cheese until smooth. With spoon, stir in green onions and Worcestershire sauce. Cover and refligerate about one hour. On work surface, with hands, shape cheese mixture into shipe of large pinecone. Arrange on wooden board. Beginning at narrow end of cone, carefully press almonds about 1/4 ipch deep into cheese mixture in rows, wiaUng suTt that pointed end of each almond extends at a slight angle.

Pnntifni^ pressing almonds into cheese mixture in rows, with rows slightly over-hqiping, until all cheese is covered. Garnish pinecone with pine sprigs. Serve with crackers. Makes about 25 servings.

lioie Almond Holiday Redpcs...for a copy of'Hlie New Ireaiuty (rf Almcmd Recipe^ (100

grem redpa), Knd 75< to P.O. Box 42577, San Ftancaco, CA 94142.

ti^her flour, soda and spices; add to butter mixture and stir well. Add orange juice mixture and nuts; mix well.

S. Place a teaspoon of batter into paper-lined miniature muffin tins. Top with one or two pieces of reserved fruit or a candied cherry. Bake at 350 for 20 to 25 minutes do not overbake. Cool, then prick with a fork and sprinkle with brandy, bourbon or Cointreau. Store in airtight tins; these will keep well.    Makes 100 bonbons

From Southern Accent, The Junior League of Pine Bluff Inc.. Pine Bluff, Ark. To order copies, send check for $11.45 to: The Junior League of Pine Bluff Inc., 2300 West 31st Ave., Pine Bluff, Ark. 71603.

AIMONP SWOWBALiS

Vt cup unsahed butter or margarine,

aoftened Vi cup sugar

'A cup finely ground afammds 1 cup nnstfied all-purpoM flour '4 teaspoon sah, or to taste 1 teasfMMMi vanilla extract    ^

1 ciq> confMtioiiera sugar    *

1. Using electric mixer, cream butter,'gradually add sugar, beating until light. Add almonds, flour, salt and vanilla: tnix with your hands until dough holds together. If necessary, add 1 or 2 teaspoons of cold water. Preheat oven to 300.

2. Use about 1 teaspoonful of dough for each cookie and roll between palms of hands until smooth and round. Place on foil-lined, ungreased baking sheet. Continue until all dough is shaped.

3. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until cookies are lightly browned. While still warm, dust heavily with confectioners sugar and allow to cool to room temperature.    Makes about 50 snowballs

VIENNESE UNZER COOKIE BARS

IV^ cup* unsifted all-pnrpoae flour Vi teaspoon baldng powder 1 teaspoon ground dnnamon Dusb of ground cloves Vi teaspoon salt, or to taste Vi cup sugar

Vi cup packed dark brown sugar Vi lb. unaalted butter or mar^rine 2Vi oz. blanched abnonds, ground I egg, lightly beaten I teaspoon grated lemon rind IV^ cups red raspberry Jam

1. Into large bowl, sift tether flour, baking powder, cinnamon, cloves and salt. Stir in sugar and brown sugar.

2. Using a pastry blender or two knives, cut butter into flour mixture until crumbly.

3. To flour mixture add ground almonds, egg and lemon rind: mbc together firmly with your hands until mbcture is moist throughout and holds together.

4. Remove Vi cup of dough. Spread remaining dou^ onto lightly greased 15x 10x2-inch pan, using your fingers to press dou^ evenly. Spread a layer of jam over dough, leaving a V4-inch border all around. Preheat oven to 375.

5. Roll the reserved dough into a 9-inch square and cut into li-inch-wide strips. Place strips in a aisscross-lattice pattern on top of jam.

6. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes. When cool, cut into 3 X 2-inch bars.

Makes about 24 bars

Family Webo^'Deceukr 11 isn 9





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Lots For Sale

BEAUTIFUL LOT IN COUNTRY

located only minutes from Greenville on paved highway S R 1212 (Voice ot America Road) between Stantonsburg Road and Highway 32, has community water (Bell Arthur) and is already approved tor septic tank For addi tional intormation, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348

COMMERCIAL LOTS for sale 2 large lots close to Carolina East Mail Will sell seperately $27,0(X)

each Davis Realty, 752 3000, nights Mary 756 IW, Lyle 756 2904 HUNTINGRIDGE For country living with city convenience Large residential lots, community water, restricted, FHA and VA approved Only minutes from hospital com plex on Highway 43 Millie Lilley, Owner Broker 752 4139 LARGE RESIDENTIAL lot f^rTal^ conveniently located m beautiful Baywood restricted to house of 1700 square teet or more com munity water, paved streets Call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348

lots Completely developed be tween Kmston and Griflon, close to DuPont Plant with community water and paved streets Approved for mobile homes and conventional houses Price S3400 with financing available wiith approved credit fall 752 5953

121 Apartments For Rent 121 Apartments For Rent

ACONDOMINIUM FOR CHRISTMAS???

Why not? Cannon Court Con dominiums have monthly payments lower than rent! Two bedroom units available now Call Iris Cannon at 746 2639 or 758 6050, Owen Norvell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, Wil Reid at 756 0446 or 758 6050 or Jane Warren at 758 7029 or 758 6050

MOORE&SAUTER

no South Evans 758-6050

ALMOST NEW TOWNHOUSE 2

bedrooms. I'r baths. Convenient location Call 756 7314 days, 756 4980 nights

AN ENERGY EFFICIENT 2

bedroom, t'j bath townhouse with fireplace Washer dryer hook ups 752 8949

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'r] baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ^

DUPLEX APARTMENT available at Frog Level on 1 acre wooded lot. 2 bedrooms. 1'^ baths, kitch en/dining combination, sundeck, heat pump. $265 a month. No pets. 756 4624 before 5 p.m. or 756-5168 after

DUPLEX APARTMENT. 2

bedrooms, 1'y baths. Appliances. Excellent location, shopping, theatre and hospital. Call 756 4498 after 6 p.m.

ATTRACTIVE AND ENERGY ef

ticient 1 bedroom apartment, Hooker Road. $225 per month, $225 deposit Call Tommy, 756 7815

LowestSingle Family Lot Prices in Greenville! ;

If you are looking for affordable | wooded lots within the city limits. | you    must see BAYTREE Prices j

start    as low as $11 000    I

756 6410    !

RYSI DEllf L LOTS Tor Tale" Buy 74hi5-t3e.ao4*4vi4acres tor your , dream house Close to city! Prime i location vvater and paving availa I ble Restrictions $29 900 Call Davis i Realty. 752 .1000 nights Mary 7.S6

1997    Lyle 756 2904      '

VETERXnTT o down payment j low monthly payment, low interest | horrie loans Are your due tor honest and faithful service Let a Veteran help vou get your due Call Bob at 756 0191 8 to 8 or 752 0569 after 8 pm

117 Resort Property For Sale

BAYVIEW Buy now at off season price tour bedroom trailer with 1'. baths, includmq lot Only S14.900 Estate Realty Co 752 5058 mqhts 758 4476or 752 3647

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments

All energy efficient designed.

Queen sice beds and studio couches

Washers and dryersoptional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor

wUh-porches - -    -------

Frost free refrigerators

Located in A/alea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pels

Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756 7815

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse near hospital and mall 2 bedrooms. I'2 baths, washer dryer hook ups, efficient No pets $3(X) per month 756 8904 or 752 2040

BRICK TOWNHOUSE 2 bedroom, end unit, storage, near Nichols 756 9006 after 6pm

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded: water front lot on the -Pamlrc-o-River i mile from Washington NC 1 Quiet established neighborhood i Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights RIVER COTTAGE on pilings 4 bedrooms. 3 baths heat pump ; central air River in front Canal | behind 200 foot pier Port Side Also 1 12x20building 746 6127    I

HERE'S ALL YOU have to do Call the classified department with your ad for a still good item and you'll make some extra cash! Call 74^6166,    -    -----

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100 EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

Dial direct phones

25 channel color tv

Maid Service

Furnished

All Utilities

Weekly Rgtes

756 5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

ELM VILLA Apartments, 208 South Elm Street 1 bedroom furnished; heat, air and water furnished. Call 752 3376

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse. wooded area. $310 month 756 6295 after 6

ENERGY EFFICIENT. 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, $310 756 6295atter6p m

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6869

HOSPITAL AREA, Med School New townhouses, 2 bedrooms, 1'2 baths. No pets $300 756 2193 _______

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile - homev Security deposits required no pets Call 758 4413 beiween 8 and 5

NEED STORAGE? We have any Si2e to meet your storage need Call Arlington Self Storage Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Can56 9933

WAREHOUSE STORAGE aTd sales 1 space Excellent location Up. to 55 000 square toef Adjacent office available Pnce negotiable 752 4295 756 7417

121 Apartments For Rent

NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURGMANOR !

BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS

Features

2 large bedrooms

1 *^-b'a7hs.....-.........

Thermopane windows

E 300 Energy etticient

Heat Pumps

Spacious floor plan

Beautiful individua' Williamsburg

BUDGET MINDED

(4)A78x13 I ^ Whitewall Recaps

interior

Patio's with privacy fence

Washer dryer hookups

K itchen appliances

Custom built cabinets

CALL 756-7647 LOVE TREES?

E - peri livmq aoor

>ni e fh unique m <iparfment /vith Hi^fure outsicio your

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Qua' t V construction ti replaces Heat pumps hedtmg costs i>0 per cent less than comparable units' dish.vasher .sashc'' drver hook ups cable TV /vali to -.vail carpet thermopane Amdo.ss extra msuta tion

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

y I Saturday    I    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Ott Arlington blvd

756 5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

80.00

Free Mounting And Balancing Other Sizes Also On Sale

Sale Ends Saturday, Dec. 17th

COUPON

M3.88 GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER *13.88

on i

HlTffl

CIHNC

'1398

IliliiCM I FOHiiCN CARS 7 iiciiiifti Sr till'    _

'(nfl SNtgg'fig CttHtt 7b6U?'

tnDiOinwiA* 7U44I'

FRONT EDO AllCNMINT >I3M EXPIRES 12-31-R3

GRCENVIilf

G2Z3ZSD

Juf Say Charge H

uncmi errowarn

West tnd Shopping Center    729    Dickinson    Avenue

Phone 756-9371    Phone 752-4417

Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri.    Open    8:00-6:00    Mon.-Fri.

Sat 8:00 fo 5:00    Sal. 8:00 to 5:00

Also Stores In Tarboro And Rocky Mount

Greenville's Finest Used CarsI

(Located At Honda Store)

1982 Renault Fuego Ond 1982 Honda Civic i i n >

'pup;: irftii>niH'K)ii

1982 Honda Prelude i or

'i 'ppf : tr.in^ii!i'>:oti    ,,f    m    rolcr

1982 Honda Civic > pxrd

trrUisin^hi'Jii 'jTK' ''Ku-r '-fir

1981 Honda CV-650 Custom Motou'a-k' 47ii(i Iiiiies

cleiti; nikt'

1981 Toyota Corolla Ku.i m

(o!or

1981 Toyota Corolla ~ Kiut n

I olor

1981 Honda Civic 1300

fioi-l III fo;, ir

1980 Honda Prelude 2 door

SiiuT ill color .uitomrttir Irrtiiimikkiori

1980 Datsun 210 v.imkiii

Dll!*'' 'pt'i'.i,trriii'ni;-,Miai

1980 Chevrolet Citation

All 1. onditioii AM 1 M , sterfo *'\lr.iDt'k

,)ffordilhl*r low IIIOl'ifiiL prlV.'Dlt-'III'

1979 Ford Granada

Rt'Dtujitdt Blui' Just liki'brtind nu'..

1979 Mazda 626 4 door

White AuloDicitii trdnsinis'jion, air' onditifin

Bob Barbour

o'U() s. Memorial Dr. Greenville

3^4500

1979 MGB Convertible

Like new. 47 800 miles, green with black convertible top, AM FM stereo

1977 Datsun 280"Z 5 speed

transmission, air condition, AM-FM stereo radio

(Located At Volvo Store)

1982 BMW 528e - i.w mikay,

ujtnpletelL automalic. leather !nterif>r. une owner nice

1981 Renault 18i , Economy

with Class' Low miles

1981 Buick LeSabre Limited

2.8,000 miles, one owner, like new-loaded

1981 Pontiac Lemans Automatic

power steering and brakes, air condition, low mileage, nice family car'

1979 AMC Jeep Cherokee

Golden Ragle Leaded with options, hard \(> find truck

1979 Ford Mustang Air

condition, one owner

1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

l.andau ,jlLOOO miles, power windows, tilt wheel, power steering and , brakes, air condition

1976 BMW 530i Immaculate

Classic Car Hard to Find Air conditioning, cassette

BobBarbour

VOLVDA.VK Jeep Renault

!-)303 S Memorial Or Greenville 355-7200  -1 -

COUGAR. A RICH LOOK

WHHIN YOUR REACH.

Check our great price on the totally new Cougar. Youll love the look. Youll love our price. See us soon and save!

9978.00

32 ^ 20

* EPA ESI MPG

MERCURY COUGAR LS

All-new aerodynamic design

Dramatic formal roof line

3.8 liter V-6/3-speed automatic

transmission tOpllonal 5.0 liter V-8 AOD also available)

M E R C U R Y COUGAR

* Manufacturers Suggested Base Retail Price

EAST

CAROLINA

GMC

TRUCKS

LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC

West End Circle    Greenville,    N.C.

756-4267

The

Spotter

THEPROFFSSIONAL WOODCITTERBUYS STIHL MORE THAN ANYOTHER CHAIN SAW INTHE WORLD.

WHICH MEANS ALL THREEOrUS ARE DOING THINGS RIGHT.

Clark & Co.

Of Greenville, Inc.

AwitfSJ f lyiii f'aikgii

756-2557

Sports

Gifts

Gifts for Everyone

ciSoi)T)

Graenvill*

Squire

Shopping

Center

DOWNEYS ORIGINAL

.. 101HOUOM CiniNO

Try all three - Irish Whiskey Cake. Chocolate Walnut Brandy Cake. Golden Sherry Spice Cake - A delightful lamily gift lor the person who has everything! BEST SELECTION OF IMPORTED CRACKERS AND CHEESE IN GREENVILLE

For Special Christinas

GIFTS

HANDCRAFTED WOOD ITEMS COUNTRY CRAFTS & ANTIQUES Toys, Dolls & Stuffed Animals SPECIAL

Vast assonmcnt of power tools, large, small. Christmas Decorations, Glassware-formal & informal. Poor Mans Flea Market

Highway 264 East- 8 miles from Greenville

Open Wed - Sun. 8 to 6 752-1400

Laysnty Now For Chrlitmai

WARRENS DOG & HUNTING SUPPLIES

]02-E Ettl fOth Gieenville. N C

Gifts for the Home

SONY - GE - SHARP TELEVISIONS

Close Out Sale 90 Days Same As Cash $1000 Instant Credit

Goodyear Tire Center

West End    iMOIeklnaonA*.

71M371    7*2^417

Hi

m

Elcctronicf

"Exptft Rtpiii 0) Sound Equipmonl UHt AtttomobH lnsttllttion$"

3112 South Memorial Driw

756-9533

OAVIO WILLIAMS GORHAM CLARK CoOwner    CoOwner

Gift

Suggestions

Samsonite Attache Cases Shealfer Pen A Pencil Sets Photo Albums Desk Assessories SCM Portable Typewriter* Sentry Safes Globes

Appoinlmeni Books And Many Other Professional Gills

Ollic* Equipment Co . Inc. 59S Evans Streel

752-2175

422 Arlington Blvd lOpposife Pill Plata)

756-4224

-5^^^ Sports Gifts

IZOD CLOTHING

Entire Stock

20% to 50% Off AYDEN GOLF (COIMIRY CLUB

Open 7 Days A Weak     748-338

Hungate's

arts (RAI 15 HdbBIIS

Pitt Plaza (jteenville. N.C.

Phone 756-0121

LOOKING FOR -SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR CHRISTMAS

CHECK HUNGATES FOR THOSE UNIQUE HARD TO FIND GIFTS!

Gifts for the Home

WATERBEDS BEDDING SAVE UP TO 50%

FREE SHEETS OR FRAME with each $300 Purchase

ONE

STOP

SLEEP

SHOP

FAaOBYMATniSS

AWATnUDS

355-2626 730 Greenville Boulevard (Naif To Pitt Plan

f'j Gifts For Kids

Locally Hand Made Cabbage Patch Like DOLLS

Hand Made

RAGGEDY ANN & ANDY DOLLS

Lois ol unique hand made gilts 10 choosa from

PJNEWOOD

200 E. Greenville Blvd.    756-7978

Gifts

for

Mom

Ladies 14 Karat Gold

DIAMOND STUD EARRINGS

$70 up

Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers

liidependenl Jewelers    Downtown Matl

Special Christmas

A Give Her -

A SINGER 756-0747 GREENVILLE SEWING

Machines

Specially Priced For Christmas

SlflSMCMlECXIMMtWMi

114 E. Fifth St.

Sports ju? Gifts

Going Out of Ski Business

SALE

Large Inventory to Liquidate.

IZOD GOLF & TENNIS SOCKS 1/2 PRICE

ALL TENNIS BALLS 1/2 PRICE ALL GOLF BALLS 40% OFF Normal Retail No returns, exchanges or retunda.

GORDON FULP, PRO

756-0504 Located At Greenville Country Club Open 7 Days A Week

A Very Special 5 CHRISTMAS I GIFT I

For The Entire Family! {

RIDE IT! ENJOY m THE

SCHWINN

DELUXE

EXERCISER!

Acclaimed by experts a "Best Buy" in stationary exercisers.

Added features include a built-in speedometer and a built-in audible timer Theres even an easily adjustable seat-so that the whole, lamily can enjoy its benefits-along with electro-forged Schwinn frame and ball-bearing pedals with soft foot straps Assembted, ready to ride.

SUTTON

SERVICE CENTER

1105 Dickinson Avenue

752-6121

Wide Selection of Candles Including Williamsburg Candles Christinas Wreaths and Ornaments Gift Items in Wood and Porcelain Wide Selection of Brass Gifts

WMPPWG jewelry    toys

THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 911 Dickinson Avenue Park View Commons 8th & Memorlal_Drlve





A-8 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Baker Gives Helms Helping Hand

LOOKI\(; FOK SI PPOKT - The Alabama Democratic Conference met ii^Mohile Satiirdax to endorse a presidefttial candidate, with Democrats UalTer^ondale, left, and the Rev;

Jesse Jackson, right, among those speaking to the black organization. Sen. Fritz Hollings, a Democrat from South Carolina, also sTJoken.AP Laserphoto)

RALEIGH. N.C. (UPI) -Senate'"majority leader Howard Baker lent a joyful hand Saturday to the re-election campaign of Sen. Jesse Helms while a womens group assailed Helms for turning his back on women.

Baker. R-Tenn.. said Helms is the best senator in the country in representing the interests of his state and in making his views known.

After speaking out for the North Carolina Republican, Baker then appeared with Helms and Sen. John East, R-N.C.. at a $250-a-person reception for Helms. About 250 people attended.

Outside the Raleigh hotel where the reception occurred. about three dozen people staged a protest picket against Helms. The predominantly female group carried signs with such messages as "Keep Helms Out Of Your Bedroom, and "The Gender Gap Will Get You." Another sign bore Helms' face and read Public Enemy No. 1 Against Women."

Joy Osborne, secretary of the North Carolina National

Organization for Women, said her group planned )icket lines wherever Helms lolds fund raisers in North Carolina.

"He has not only opposed all forms of help for women, but he has done nothing to help women and children, she said.

The state chapter said in a statement Helms has voted against the Equal Rights Amendment, funds for shelters for battered women and federal funding for family planning. The group also charges Helms has supported budget cuts that have hurt poor women.

"Senator Helms has supported the drastic budget cuts of the Reagan administration, reducing or eliminating services of vital importance to women and families with low incomes, the group said. "Since Jesse Helms took office, there are 2 and a half million more poor women in this country.

The group said Helms has not introduced legislation to improve or contribute to the economic condition of women in North Carolina.

MOIW13AC2S42W

Cabinel constructad o< high-impact plaMc . Color Monitor adjusts color picture    IJAM/ ONLY

before you see it Programmtte Scan    MV/ff VI

Remote Control selects and scans

channels Quartz Electronic Tuning with 91-channel capability Earphone and earphone jack 100% solid state chassis

[

I.

729 Dickinson AS.*752-4417 West End Center*756-9371

Mndale Gains Endorsements...

(Cohttnuci rbraA the grassroot> 'iclp (litered by its 25o.O(K] numbers and for the symbolic \alue next year when women s votes will be more crucia! than ever in the "shadow Hi the gender gap.

The 37-mewber' .NOW board made the endorsement decision at a long, closed meeting that followed hard lobbying by Caliiornia .'^en Alan Cranston ancj warnings by some that rejecting Jackson would cause a split between feminist' and blacks

"This IS not a negative ciJfiment on ,Jesse .Jackson's candidacy or any ot the other candidates we considered,' Ms. Goldsmith sajd,,_ not at all a rejection. We leel very compatible with the direction ot his .Jackson's' campaign"

She promised that NOW will contribute signilicantly to .Mondale's campaign, joining organized labor, the National Education .issocia-tion and others in that ettort

"We are activist> and wc will puh'our energiesTiehmd defeating Ronald Reagan and electing Walter ^lon dale." .Ms Goldsmith said. "We feel that adding women to the coalition will carr\ Mndale to victor'. "

CONCERT (.RANT

CHICAGO .AP - The Orchestra! .Association says it has received Sli.x.i.ikki from Merrill L;vnch to sp-o-nsor a series of eight conce.fts pres-entec by A!'!:ec A-Associatior. .n me "v.--.-seaso.^.

The NOW leader said she had long discussions with Mndale about considering a woman as His running mate in 1(W4, She guessed the chanccjs are "5tK50" that "Mndale would choose a woman.

Ohio .Sen. John Glenn had drawn substantial interest I rom the feminists, but his recent refusal to back expanding civil rights laws to co\cr homosexuals and lesbian." 'ook hi;n out ot conten-tionlor'he.NOW backing.

Roxaniic Conlin. the top woman in Glenn's campaign and Democratic candidate for governor in Iowa in 1932, said Glnin was "disappointed but riot surprised t)\ the decision."

..^M.omca, McFadden,. who directed Cranston's ettort to win the endorsement, said. "It's not groups who vote. It's people who will be going to those caucuses m Iowa,"

.Sen Gary Hart, the Colorado Democrat who has m.ide womens issues the centerpiece ot his campaign, said m a statement trom his Uashingtonottice:

"Candidates are spending too much time seeking endorsements and are not giving American women the dicussions of the issues they deserve."

Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew and former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern were never in the running to win the NOW endorsement.

At the Mobile meeting, .Mndale. Jackson and Hollings made their pitches to the delegates pondering the first endorsement by a major statewide black party group in the South.

"1 didn t start calling you last week. 1 started calling you m 1965," Jackson told the .eiegajes. "1 spent more nighls m jail than any candidate."

Mndale also got a warm reception, telling the delegates of his visit to a Salvation Army center Saturday morning where he said. "I,, saw again what I prayed I'd never see - the rebirth of hunger in .America "

After the speech. .Mndale

flew to St. Louis to attend one of his 10,000 fund-raising parties.

The nationwide effort will provide an end-of-the-year infusion of cash to the campaign's already subslantial coffers. And Mndale will get a double bang for the buck.

All of the party conlribu: tions will come in amounts under $250 and thus would be matched by federal dollars, raising Mondale's one-night take to $3 million.

In another political development. former President Gerald R. Ford said that the 1984 presidential election will be "a lot closer" than some GOP experts expect if Mndale is the Democratic candidate,

"Mndale, who I think is going to get the nomination, will be a tough candidate," Ford said in an interview broadcast on the Cable News Network.

ItTakesA BkStoreTo FillTiese Shoes

Finding clothing that fits the big or tall man is no small task. Come to the store that specializes in extra large sizes.You'll find a tremendous selection of quality menswear by famous names such as Robert Bruce, Jamar Ruby, Members Only, Damon Sportswear and Manhattan shirts. lnfact,TheHubLtd. Big&Tall Store is one of the largest in the U.S.

Well even giftwrap and ship your purcha^ anywhere in the continental U.S. for free.

'^IhenufadfH^

DIGfifMLL

special Hours snop Mon - sai iO - 9: .^0, Sun i - 6 Crabtree \alley Mall Raleigh 919 ^82 (Ki3^

Mon. thru Fri.

4 P.M. til 8 P.M. Saturday 12-8 P.M. Santa's One Stop Shopping Center

Pitt Plaza

Greenville

CLOSING FOR GOOD FRIDAY DEC. 30TH

Savings Up To

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ON ENTIRE STOCK OF...

Pianos, Organs, Guitars & Amplifiers, Drums, Band Instruments Violins and More

All Sales Cash, Visa, MasterCard And Financing Available

756 0007 SHOP

AcroSb From Pitt Plaza Next To K-Mar

Greenville Square Shopping Center

STORE HOURS MON THRU SAT 10 AM TIL 6 P M f RIDAY NIGHTS Til. 9P M





Children's Toughskins jeans - good looks that are tough to wear out!

Sturdy, good-looking Toughskins denim jeans are Dacron polyester, DuPont 420 nylon and cotton. And they have bar-tacked stress points and double-stitched seama

$9.99 Little boys sizes 4-7..........................6.99

$10.99 Little girls sizes 4-6x........................7.99

$13.99 Bigger boys sizes 8-20  ....................9.99

$12.99 Bigger girls sizes 7-14.......................8.99

Bigger boys sizes 8-20 Reg. $13.99

9

99

pair

SAVE *2 ,,3

Children's long sleeve tops

Choose easy-care styles to top off our jeana

$6.99 Little boys knit top, 4-7........................4.99

$8.99 Little girls blouse, 4-6x........................6.99

$11.99 Bigger boys knit top, 8-20...................8.99

$11.99 Bigger girls blouse, 7-14.....................8.99

Reg. $6.99 to $11.99

4,o8

9925%-33% OFF

Entire stock of sweaters for little and bigger boys and girls

f.59    $099

Reg $8.99 to $11.99 W tO U each Choose their favorites from our huge assortment

$10 Little boys sizes 4-7.......................6.59

$9.99 Little girls sizes S, M, L..............  6.59

$11.99 Bigger boys sizes S, M, L, XL...........8.99

$8.99 Bigger girls sizes S, M, L.................6.69

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

^    G^-11





The Datly Reflector, Greenville, N C. Sunday, December 11.1983    B-15

Mutual Funds

(Continued from page B-14)

MunHjYId    *97    8 94    8 94-    03

Muni tier    6 91    6.88    6.88-    03

15.14 15 04 15 04- 03

11 68 11 64 11 68 + 06 9.40    9.29    9.29-    .10

12 73 12.49 12.49- .31 7.90    7 84    7.84-    01

6 31    6.27    6 27-    .04

21.47 21 34 21 36+ .04 14 00 13.90 13.92- .06 10.05 10.02 10 02- .03

Pacific Pfwenix SciTech SpVal Mid Amer MidAmHiGr MSB Fund n Mutual Benefit MdwIGvt n Mutual of Omaha America n Growth Income Tax Free Mutual n MutI Shrs n NaessThm n NatAviaTec n .Ntlind n r Nat Securities: Balanced Bond CalTxE Growth Preferred Income .Stock

Tax Exmpt TotKet Fairfield Fd NalTele

Nationwide Fds: NatnFd NtGwth NtBond NELifeFund

9.91    9.87

6.07    6.03

847    8.44

9.79    978

17.31 17.24 53 83 53.69

9.87- .05 6 04- .14 8 44- .03 9.79- .01 17 28 + 05 53.75+ 10

56 03 55 77 55 82-1.66 10.32    10.22    10.22-    .05

13.97 13.86 13.86

13.55    13.49    13.55 +    06

3.41    3.39    3.39-    02

11 24    11.20    11.21-    03

9.54    9.48    9 51-    05

7.17

7.21

948

8.19

644

899

7.13

7.17

9.42

8.16

6.41

8.92

7 13- ,06

7 18- 03 9.42- ,05

8 18

6 41- 02 8.96- 05

14.26 14.14 1414- 18

999

7.93

908

9.91

7.86

903

9 92- 06 7 93 + 09 9.03- ,07

Growth Income Retire Eqt TaxExmt Neuberger Berm Enerw n Guardian n Liberty n Manhattn n Partners n NY Muni n NewtonGwth n Newtonlncm n Nicholas n Nichinc NrestlnTr tr NrestlnGt n NovaFund n NY Ventur NuveehMuni n Omega fund n OneWilliam n Oppenheimer Fd: Direct eqinc ^ OpjKnhm Fd

High Yield Option S^ial Target TaxFree Aim Time Overfount Sec Paramt Mull' PaxWorld n PennSguare n PennMutual n PermPrt n Phila Fund Phoenix Series BalanFd I'vFdSer Growth X HiYield

SiockFund x PG Capit Pilgrim Grp: MagnaCap Magna Incom PAR

Pilgrim Fd Pioneer Fund Pionr Bd Pionr Fund Pionr 11 Inc Pionr 111 Inc Planndlnvsl

22 76 22 58 22 58- .12 24 26 23 86 23.86- 35 10 33 10 28 10.28- .03 22 94 22.75 22 75+ .05

6.59 6 58 6.58- 01

17.61    17.54    17 58-    01

38.49 38 24 38 27 - 09 4.05    4    03    4    03- 02

6.33    6    27    6    28 * 03

14 76 14 66 14 66- II + 07    1    07    1    07

29 91 29 41 29 44- 66 8.07    8.05    8 05-    01

26.00 25 83 25 83- 20 3.66    3.65    3.65-    01

1163 11 59 11 59 - 02 11.54 11 49 11 49- 10

16 75 16 65 16 65- 08 7 99    7    93    7    93- 05

7.26    7    24    7.25- 03

12.80 12 62 12 62- .31 21 56 21 40 21 41- 19

22.58 22.16 22 16- 40 7.68    7    63    7.61- .03

9.77    9    64    9 67-- ,05

9.59    9    29    9 29-30

1891 18 84 18 84 - 06 23.79 23 75 -23.79 + 01 22,92    22,77    22 88t    14

19 55    19 25    19 25-    40-

'7 68    7    68    7    68

19 55    19 14    19 14 -    51

14 34    14 13    14 13    24

17 09    16 97.    16 97-    14

14 45 14 40 14 40 4

1181 1174 9 59    9.54

6 50    6    48

12 08 11 91 9 97    9    91

11 74-9 54-648 II 91 9 96-

1051 10 49 10 49 20 62 20.5:1 20 SOIS 98 12 50 12.50 9 41    9 ;17

1.5,45 10 97 13 43 13 37

9 37 o:l

10 97 4 :i8 13:i7- 07

6:i3

80.5

6 27 8 00

6 33 + 8 02

07 04

23 (14    23    02    2:1    04    4    02

12 80    12    73    12    80+    10

8 85    8    83    8    81    03

22.16 22 09 22 09 16 22    16    18    16    18    +    1

12.58 12.56 12 56 4 04 2110 21 06 211)6    05

Stox Weekly Dollar Leaders

NEW YORK (API - The following is a list of the most active stocks based on the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied bv the shares traded

Name    TotltllMti    Salesihdsi    Last

Atner TiT

$1.490,805 232ai2 63'j

IBM

$624.352 S2I38 122'i

AmerT&T wi

$409,774 207481 19'

DiamShm

$220,031 114302 20

Gen Motors

$205,579 27781

75

BellSouth wi

$178,218^93

84+1

East Kodak

$172.062 23291

74'

NYNEX WI

$157.402 25751

61'..

BellAtlan wi

$153.872 23270

66';

GenlElect s

$149.647 25913

57'..

Exxon

$148.:!22 38777

Wh

.Imeritech wi

$144,035 22418

63+1

Honevwell

$131,517 97:i3 135',

PacilTel WI

$131.410 24112

55

USWesl WI

$124.729 21645

57+1

Plitrend n PrecMtl n Price Funds: Growth n Gwthinc n Income n Intl n NewEra n NewHorizn n Tax Free n Pro Services: MedTec n Fund n Income n Prudential Bache: Equity

CvtSc X HiYield HYMuni Option

13 63    13 SS    13.55-    06

19 05    18 44    18.44-    .28

15.45    15.35    15 37-    .01

13.11    13.06    13.06+    .02

8.28    8.26    8.28-    .02

13 73    13 58    13 58-    02

18.37    18.31    18.33+    .01

18.25 18.05 8.38    836

10.03

9.67

8.57

9.88

959

8.54

14 49 1441 9.80    9    70

10 25 10 20 13 52 13.48

h II r TaxMngd Prudent SIP Putnam Funds: Convert CalTax Capital

Intec I Intl Equ George Growlh Health High Yield Income Invest NY TaxEx -t.iption Tax Exempt Vista Voyage Quasar n Rainbow n RochTax RoyceFd n srfEqt Safeco Secur: Equity n Growth n Incom n Munic.n StPaul Invest: Capital    I

Growth Income    ;

Special n Scudder Funds: CommnStk n Develop n CapGth n Income n Internatl n MangdMun n Security Funds: Action Bond

18.05- .28 8 36- 0(3

9.88- .22 9.59- .05 8.54- .03

14.41+ .05 9.70- .11 10.20- .05 13.48- .05

15.15 15.08 15 10- .01

14.77 14 64 164- 12 9.24    9 15    9.15-    12

20 30 20.21 20.21- .10

13.77 13 69 13.70- 03

15.21 15.11 15.11- .12

13.38 13.35 13.37- .02

22.38 22.22 22.26

12.81 12.71 12.72- .28 19.44 19.20 19.20- ,07 14.68 14.52 14,52- .11 12.96 12.86 12.86- .06

16.22 16.05 16.05- .09 16.60 16.51 16.51- .11 6.74    6.71    6,71-    .04

11 48 11.38 11.38- 09

14.16 14.13 14.16- .02 12.18 12.12 12.12- .05

21 82 21.78 21.80 20.35 20 07 20.07- .13 17,20 16.89 16.89- .41 48,73 48.34 48.34- .62

4.01    3.97    3.97-'    .04

14.06 14.02 14.03- .05 7 03    7,00    7,02-    .01

9.93    985    9.90+    .08

1016 1012 10.15+ 02 18.87 18.73 18.85- 06

12.81 12.76 12.81+ .05 11.34 11,29 11.29- .07

13.80 13.58 13.60- .25 15.40 15.18 15.19- 27

9.90    9.54    9.58-    .31

23 99 23.60 23.61- .46

14.90 14.82 14.86- .01 63.03 62.29 62.29-1.29

14.06 13.98 13.98- .05 11,62 11.58 11,58- .07 21 59 21.43 21.4.3- .10 7 61    7,58    7.58-    .04

Weekly Amex Dollar Leaders

NEW YORK lAPi -The following is a list of the most active stocks based on the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded

Name    ToKtlOOU)    Saleslhds)    Last

DorchslGas    $42.475    20470    2C'-

WangLabB s    $30.171    9074

Verbatim s    $24.803    14379    17'n

TIE Comm s    $13,785    4795    27',

DalaPrd s    $10.134    x3364    30',

Amdahl s    $9.891    .5654    18'.

KeyPharm s    $8.257    4967    16',

NATimes A    $8,059    944    85

ResrtlnlA    $7,944    2077    :17'.

PetroUw    $7,091    6234    11',

What The Stock Market Did

Invesl ITtra Selected Funds: AmerShrs n SpeclShrs n Seligman Group: CapilFd ComStk Comun GrowthFd Income Sentinel Group: Balanced Bond

Common Stk (irowlh Sequoia n Sentrv f und Shearson Funds: AggrGr Appreciain HiYield MgMun ShrmnDean n SierraGrth n Sigma funds Capital Incom Invest Sped n TusfSh Venture Shr SmthBarEqt n SmihBarl G Solien

Swstnlnvlnc n Sovereign Inv State Bond Grp: Commn Stk Diversifd Progress statrarmGth n StatFarmBal n StStreet Inv ExchFd n Grwth n r Invst n r Steadman Funds: Amerind n Associated n Invest n Oceanogra n Stein Roe Fds Balance n Bond n CapOppor n Discovr Stock n SteinSpFd n TaxExempt n Cnivrse n StrategCap Strateglnv StrattnGth n Strngln n StrngTot n SunGrwth Templeton Group Foregn Global I Global II

7.71

7.84

709

987

767

7.56

7.78

698

980

7.60

970    964

23 62 23.51

12.88

14.46

850

7.66

12.04

7.56- .22 7.78- .05 6.98- .11 9.80- 18 7.60- .12

9.68+ .05 23.53-

12,88- .25 14 46- .06 8,52- .20 7,66- .07 12.04- .09

914

6.20- .03 16.94- 01

9 16    9.13

6 24    6.20

17 03    16.94

14.51 14.33 14 33- .13 36 56    36.38    36.38-    01

10 52    10.47    10.47-1 75

11 75    11 52    11 55-    27

18 22    18 09    18.09-    08

19 11    19 04    19 04-

1317 13.14 13.15- 04

7 68    7.43    7.45-    09

14 20    13.99    13 99-    29

13'J8 7.45 775 7,22 1086 1051 16.05 10 13

13 00 13.00- 10 7 40    7.40-    06

7.73    7 75+ 01

7 20    7.20-    01

10.83 10 8,5- 01 10.37 10.37- .12 15.92 15.92-^ 13 10.11 1013 16 40 16.34 16,37- .02 4 62    4.61    4.61-    .02

19 40 19.33 19 40+ .07

597 6.50 922 II 05 1449

5.92 646 913 10.96 10 96-14 44 14.44

5.92 6.49+ .01 9.14- .13

Growth World Trahsam Cap TransamNew n Travelrs EqU TudorFdn 20th Onitury: Growth n Select n Ultra n r USGvn USAA Group: Grwth n Income n Snbit n TxEHYn TxEITn TxEShn Unified Mgmnt: Accum n Gwth n Inco n MutI n United Funds: Accumultiv Bond

IntlGth    X

Cont Income FiducSh    X

High Income Income MunicpI NwCcpt SciEn^ Vanguard x Utd Services: GIdShr GBTp Growth Prospctr Value Line Fd: Bond n

Fund n x Income n Levrge Gth n Speer Sit n Vance Exchange CapExch f n DeposBst f n Divers f n ExchFd f n ExchBst f n FiducEx f n SecFidu f n Vanguard Group Explorer n IvestFund n Morgan n QualUivI n (ualDvII n (ulDvIII n IntlPortf n US Portf n GNMAn HiY Bond n IG Bond n ShrtTrm n IndexTrust n MunHiYd n Muniint n MuniLong n MuniShrt n Wellesley n Wellington n Windsor n Venturlnco WallSt Growlh WeingrtnEq n Weslgrd WoocTstruthers: deVeghM n Neuwirth n PineStr n YesFd

9.73- .10

9.84    9.73

12.30 12.21 12.21-11.80 11.73 11.74+ .03 8.17 8.13 8.13- .06 12.50 12.51 12.51- .10 21.20 20.90 20.90- .42

16.10 16.00 16.01- .09

26.10 25.86 25.86- 28 8.42 8.29 8.29- .21

97.39 97.32 87.32- 10

14.78 14 54 14.54- .29 10 73 10 70 10.70

17.31 16.90 16.90- .51 11.57 11.52 11.53- .07 11.06 11.06 11.06- 02 10 24 10.23 10.24+ .01

8.15    8.13    8.14-    02

16 57 16 49 16.50- 09

12.39 12.36 12J39- .02

12.39 12.33 12.35- 05

10.32 10.26 10.26- .03 5.53    5,50    5,50-    .06

641    6.30    6.30

14.06 13 99 13 99- 06 6 00    5.92    5 92

13 83 13.79 13.79- 05

13.78 13.70 13.71- .06 6.22    6.20    6.21

5.13    5.09    5.09- .06

11.37 11.32 11 32- .08 5 93    5.84    5.84

Drought Having An Efect On Cocoa Futures

7,80    7.53

12 88 12 82 9.9 9.10 89    .86

11.79 11.74 13.15 12.95 6.94    6.90

20.21 19.99 16 68 16.38

7.53- .12 IZm- 08 9.10- .10 .86- .02

11.74- .05 12.95- .23 6.90- .04 19.99- 18 16.38- .28

61.16 60.72 60.72-1.08 39.92 39.65 39.65- 39 67.76 67.36 67.36- .91 104.27 103.83 103.83- .91 85.49 84.92 84.92- .90 56 17 55.41 55,41-1.12 61.02 60,66 60.66- .59

37.44 36.96 36 96- .51

15.96 15.89 15.89- .04 13.80 13.67 13,67- .08

15.51 15,39 15.50+ .03

7.51    7.44    7,44-    .07

24.69 24 61 24.61- .05

25.43 25.31 25.34- .01 38.37 38.25 38.25

9.16 9 13 9:13- 01 9.02    8.98    8.98-    .05

7.96    7.90    7.90-    07

9.86    9.84    9.84-    02

20.82 20.73 20.73- .03

8 98    8.95    8.95-    .04

10.47 10.41 10.41- .08 9.28    9.25    9.25-    .04

1514 1514 1514 13.19 13.12 13.12- .06

12.44 12.40' 12.41- .02

11.71 11.66 11.71+ .06 If.ll 11,06 11.06

8.71    8.60    8.60-    .12

19.86 19.51 19.51- .48 1170 111 1162- 03

43.45 42.% 43.17- .42 19.19 18.% 18.%- 30 13,74 13.65 13.70- .01 8 %    8.89    8.89-    .06

No load fund. f-Previous days quote. r-Redemption charge may apply Copyright by The Associated Press

By MELISSA JOHNSON Associated Press Writer Cocoa futures orices continued to soar FYioay in moderately active trading on the Coffee, Sugar and Cocoa Exchange in New York and reached their highest levels since mid-1979.

Prices have been rising since late October amid concern that drought damage to West African cocoa crops will mean a worldwide supply shortage for the second straight year.

Most traders slowly have come to believe that demand will outweigh supply, said Mike Paulenoff, a cocoa and coffee analyst in New York with Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. But the key question remaining is how

Weekly iStopks Ups And Downs

NEW YORK (AP) - The following list shows the New York Stock Exchange stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down the most in the past week based on percent of change.

No securities trading below $2 or 1000 shares are included. Net and percentage changes are the difference between last week s closing and this week's closing.

UPS

Name Last

badlv the (;rop has been damaged, be said.

Paulenoff said it is likely cocoa inices will continue to rise and reach new contract highs. Cocoa for delivery in March settled at $2,437 a ton Friday; the contract high is $2,460 a ton.

Cocoa settled $21 to $80 higher with the contract for delivery in December at $2,405 a ton.

Concern over supplies also supported coffee prices, which cl(^ at their highest levels since March 1982, Paulenoff said,.

Dealers and roasters have been buying more coffee than is usual for this time of year, in part due to fears that dock workers might strike in New York, preventing coffee from being unloaded, and concern over weather damage to the crop, Paulenoff said.

Coffee settled .46 cent to 2.21 cents higher with the contract for delivery in Dkember at 153.31 cents a pouna.

Livestock and meat futures prices were mostly higher on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

Live cattle for delivery this month and in February set new contract highs for the second time this week, said John Gin-zel, a livestock analyst in Chicago with Drex-el Burnham Lambert Inc.

December reached 65.45 cents a pound and February hit 64.80 cents a pound, although they closed slightly off the highs.

Cattle futures prices were supported by strong wholesale beef markets, Ginzel said, and strength in wholesale pork markets buoyed hog prices.

Live cattle settled .12 cent to .90 cent higher with the con-

1 Metromed s

2 EAL wtO

3 Esquire s

4 EastnAir pf

5 EastnAirL

6 BangPnt pfC

7 BarlgPiint

8 EstnAir pfB

9 Vendo Co

10 EstnAir pfC

11 PSNH lpf

12 AmShipB

13 TiCaro s

14 Rexnord

15 SPSTech

16 Trinity

17 Paraav.ne s

18 BayFincl

19 RoyCrown

20 LUERlty n

21 PrimeCm s

22 Aileen Inc

23 USTobac s

24 Wayne Goss

25 SwslAirl

Chg +11 + I'j + 6h

+ 3'4 + I

Pet Up 44.9

55 +11 + 26'-. + 5'.

14(,

6+

17v

23')

15

2U

17",

24-'h

m!'

i'l

28+4

12-',

17'h

5'

38'..

14+k

34+

+ 2+k + 1 + 2+4

+ 3'h + 2 + 2 + 2'4 + 3 + 3

J- 91 .

+ I + 2, + 1'4

+ 1 + 4

+

+ 3+4 + 1' + 3'4

83 24    82    45    82.45-    .06

53.97    53    45    53.80 +    48

74 18    73    17    73 17-    .06

3.58

%

164

6%

355

.97

161

681

3 55- .06 97- 01 1 61- ' 03 681- .17

23.64

849

23.45 23.45- 18 8 43    8 43-    10

26.90 26 52 26.52- .62 9 15    8.89    8.89-    34

21 67 21 67- .52 17.59 17.59- ,09

22 01 17,67 7.65 1914 782 920 18,38 17.43 1651 12.74

DOW Jones Averages

NEW YORK (API - The following gives the range of Dow Jones averages Tor the week ended Dec 9

STOCK AVERAGES Open High Uw Close Chg.

Ind 1270.53 1273.78 1260 % 1260.06-5.18 Trans    605 38 609 12    602.58    604.91-0.38

Utils    134 30 135 02    133.91    133,91-0 %

65 Stks    508 55 510.19    505 84    505 84-1.75

BOND AVERAGES 20 Bonds    70,51 70.51    69%    6998-040

Utils    67.75 67.75    66.71    66.71-0.94

Indus    73.27 73.42    73.26    73.26 +0.15

COMIVIODITY FUTURES INDEX

145,11 146 80 144.04 144.80-0 58

Your neighborhood can assist the Police Department by joining the Community Watch Program. Call 752-3342 for details.

Name

1 vjHRTInds

2 InformGen

3 Whittakr

4 Intl Harv

DOWNS

Last Ch^

20,"

19 ll'i

- 5+

- 4+

- 2(

Pet Off 26.1

Off

Off

Off

IntlHarv 5.76pf 31    -    5k    Off

- " 20 V

7.62

1881

7.68

892

1823

17.41

1648

7.63- .01 18 81- .43 7.68- .19 8 92- .20 18 23- .17 17.43+ 04 16 49+ 03

12.69 12,70- 01

Advances Declines Unchanged Total issues New yrly hghs

Two

This Prev.Year Years Week Week ago ago

901    963    96    653

1 097    1.052    957    1,271

248    228    204    217

2,246 2,243 2,147 2.141 131    190    472    54

New yearly Tw's 136    98    17    62

WEEKLY A.MERH AN

Total for week    33,700,000

Week ago Year ago Jan 1 to dale 1982 to dale AMERICAN BONDS Total for week Week ago Year ago

33.550.000

43.580.000

1.981.580.000

1.353.940.000

$6.040.000

$6.020.000

$9.920.000

10% 10.89 10.89- 03 33 50 33 40 33 50- .05 10 06    9    98    9%-    11

5

6 DiamShm

7 IntlHarv wt

8 ApachePl wt

9 llwttel wt

10 Borman

n QoldnNug wt

12 IntlHarv 3pf

13 CTS Corp

14 Searle GD

15 Wieboldt Str

16 GTFl pfB

17 GrtLakeInt

18 ICN Pharm

19 AntaCorp

2u AiuitOiiip

21 GapStores s

22 TacomBoat

23 HeilmBr s

24 DuqLt 1.87pf

25 Diebold

-    3+

-    1'

- I'l

- 6

- 4',

- 6 - 1 - 1'4

Week's Most Active Stocks

NEW YORK I API-Week's twenty most active stocks Yearly Weeks Hieh Low Sales

High Low

Last Chg 63';- 1'.

70'1

57

Atner TiT

23,203,200

65

63';

21'4

17+4

AmerT&T wi

20.748,100

20';

19

19'.- I'l

26\

18

DiamShm

11.430.200 .

20'V

18

20 - :i+i

134',

87.

IBM

5,213,800

122'.

117',

122'4+ 4+.

9

3';.

Pan Am

4.599.200

9

8+.

8+.+ '4

24',

18+.

Houstind

4,093.200

20.

20

20+...- ';

31',

20

BaxterTrav s

3,935,700

23'4

21+.

22';+ I'l

39+4

27'.

Exxon

3,877,700

38,

37+4

38.+ ';

16+4

14'.

MidSouLt

3,149,100

15'.

14+.

14.- '.

56'2

27'..

MerilLyn s K mart

2.964.200

34'.

31';

32'.- 1+1

39'4

20'2

2,925.800

37

34'.

35 - 2'1

49'..

28'..

AmExpress s

2.893.000

34';

32

32'i- M

22'

11+4

DrPepper

Chrysler

2,856.400

22+. ,

20+4 ^

.2i;u+._j,

35+k

12'.

2,842.40()

29'.

27+.

28+.+ . +.

51'.

38+.

JohnsJn

2.78.5.100 -

- 42+h

39+.

40'I- 1+1

80

56

Gen Motors

2,778.100

75'4

72+4

75 + 2

58i.

31.

StdOilOh

2,648.800

43+4

41'i

43+.- 2'.

41+4

24,

SuperOil

2.606.900

36+1

34+4

:!6 + 1+.

58.

45+.

GenlElect s

2.591.300

58.

56+4

57';+ ';

63'.

60'.

NYNEX wi

2,575,100

61 + 1

60'..

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tract for delivery in December at 65.32 cents a pound; feeder cattle were .15 cent to .50 cent higher with January at 68.35 cents a pound; live hogs were .42 cent lower to .40 cent higher with December at 46.00 cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies were unchanged to 1.40 cents higher with February at 62.57 cents a pound. Soybean futures prices were higher and grain prices were mixed on the Chicago Board of Trade.

Prices in the soybean pit were supported by a report that showed the amount of soybeans crushed in the week ended Wednesday was higher than the previous week, said Susan Hackmann, a grain analyst in Chicago with A.G. Becker-Paribas. An export sales report also was favorable, she said.

Overall, trading was chop-py" in light volume. Ms. Hackmann said.

DevTopTients; ifrourside mar-kets pressured grain prices, she said, as the dollar remained strong against major foreign currencies, which discourages exports.

Wheat settled l=t cents lower to 1'2 cents Higher with the contract for delivery in December at $3.40'2 a bushel; corn was 3'4 cents lower to 2"4

cents higher with the contract for de-livery in December at $3.30'2 a bushel; oats were 1 cent lower to 1'4 cents higher with December at $1.80"4 a bushel; and soybeans were 6 cents to 15 cents higher with January at $7.82'2 a bushel.

Gold futures prices were mixed and silver prices were lower in moderate trading on the Commodity Exchange in New York.

The continued strength of the dollar against major foreign currencies weighed on gold prices, said Bill O'Neill, a met-als analyst in New York with Rudolph Wolff Commodities, Inc.

Remarks by Treasury Secretary Donald Regan that interest rates are likely to remain the same through the spring also pressured prices,

O'.Neill said......

Gold settled 60 cents lower to 40 cents higher with the contract for delivery in December at $:588:40a''iror'-ounce; silver settled 3.3 cents to 15.7 cents lower with December at S9.;477 a troy ounce.

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C Sunday. December 11,1983Manteo Shop Specializes In English Brass Rubbings

im vZ) icrnon

3'fiC EWcr 1177

tFanspEed^^round=thaJoEd and lady of the manor. When the lof^ and lady died, they were commemorated in their-local churches, cathedral or abbey with a church memorial. Up through the 12th century, this memorial was usually a large stone, marble or granite statue. It took up a lot of space and would eventually crumble and deteriorate.

Text By Gal! Roberson

MANTEO - In this coastal resort town on Roanoke Island, Robert Gatling pre sides over a brass rubbing business he and his mother own, a business so relatively unknown to the public that at first he had his doubts as to its eventual success.

Gatlings knowledge and information of England and her history contributes to the fact that many of his customers often refer to him as a walking encyclopedia on the subject he loves so much.

Amid hundreds of randomly stacked boxes, supplies and stock. Gatling tries to keep pace with his work.

The shop is located near the downtown waterfront on Sir Walter Raleigh Street, from which Shallowbag Bay can be viewed from the front windows. The front of the building, which houses the brass rubbing enterprise, is

designed in a country English style with weathered siding and overhanging balconies.

A stained-glass window catches the light from outside. Soft colors are reflecteil on the walls inside. A bell on the entry door announces the arrival of customers.

Tranported In Time

When you enter, you become transported back in time ... back to the years when Queen Elizabeth I sat upon the throne of England ... back to when heavily armored knights fought for damsels in distress and Sir Walter Raleigh planned for colonists to sail to the New World.

Gatling and his mother, Hester Gatling, wanted something other than a place where tourists could walk in and buy something, then walk out again. They wanted

to offer something that would also be educational. Their venture has done that.

To understand the English Church Monumental Brasses and the brass rubbing procedure, one has to know a little something about its history and why it evolved into such a common practice during Elizabethan ti.mes. Gatling explains it:

As Europe withdrew from the Dark Ages and into the Renaissance period, the lifestyle of the people changed. England managed to absorb the best from the continent and yet keep pace in their own culture. At that time, England had and still continues to have areas where there is a local lord of the manor. Sometimes the lords are more important than others, and are called dukes or princes. Lesser lords are known as sir. In ancient times, everything

.New .Metal Developed - Somewhere around the latter part of the 12th century. a new metal was developed on the continent which was then referred to as laten, a mixture of such elements as copper, zinc, tin and lead. Today, we know laten better as brass.

During this era in English history, it became fashionable for people to have portraits or likenesses of themselves etched in the snceis 0i Drass, i ne iir brass etching would eventually be laid flat on the floor of the church over the spot where the person was buried.

This procedure made it no longer necessary to have the large commemorative statues. This method also took less room because it was recessed into the floor. It was hard enough that you could walk on it. yet pliable enough to be etched or engraved inlQ It also, had the luster, color and feel of being gold without the expense that gold entailed.

Soon it became the fashionable thing to do. During the Elizabethan period, people started posing for these brasses. It was probably not uncommon to have heard in those days, "Have you had your brass made yet? or Im going for my brass posing today." Sometimes models were used for the brasses. Occasionally, a simple face without any real features were used, giving more highlight to a grand costume that the person wanted to show off and be remembered for.

Brasses reached their peak of popularity during the Eiizabelhaii pciiuii. Pi ior to this time, the laten sheets were imported from Germany. Only in the days of Queen Elizabeth were brass sheets finally being made in England.

Many things were destroyed as a result of the English revolution under Cromwell. Still, England has the largest number of brasses remaining today.

In the Middle Ages, most people could not read or write. Many noblemen felt it beneath their dignity to waste his time learning such things when he could employ a priest or monk to read and write for him. One offshoot was that "portraits" became increasingly important. It was almost always the aris-tocracy, or wealthy merchant class, who had their brass portraits made. This was also the class of people who could be buried in a cathedral, church or abbey.

Few Left Today Today, we know brasses as an English practice as the majority of brasses on the continent have virtually disappeared due to war. pillage and theft. For example. after the French Revolution orders were given to take up and destroy all the brasses of the aristocrats. This was done, theoretically, to get rid of the trappings of monarchy. The net result was that in Europe there are less than 300 brasses remaining. In France, only a handful are left. It is not known how many there originally were in England.

Americans Discover

Americans discovered these brasses after World War II, Many vacationed in 'TUngland because the war had so badly destroyed other parts of Europe. Though England had also suffered, sections of her countryside remained beautiful, intact, and attracted many tourists.

By 1972, these national art treasures of brasses were beginning to be worn out. Churches terminated the procedure of rubbing on the actual brass itself. Facsimilis were made as substitutes for the original by-having castings of the originals prepared. A "female mold is made of the original (a sort of rubberized substance). and from that a piaster of Paris male" mold is made. Then another "female" mold is made (the substance from which it is going to be poured in) and it is then poured. The molds are an exact clone of the original.

There are several companies which make these facsimilies in England. The company which the Gatlings deal with is called Studio 69 and is located in Norwich in Norfolk County. England.

The Gatlings are the exclusive import agents for this company. The man who IS still known as the world s authority on English church monumental brasses was John Paig-Phillips.^ He acquired exclusive right to make castings of the more famous and teautiful brasses in England.

be easily viewed and studied until a customer makes his choice. Large oak tables, surrounded by comfortable chairs, serve as a work area to those who wish to do their own rubbing. Employees assist in setting up the required materials and are on hand constantly to aid and guide the customer in his rubbing. Even young children work diligently at the tables.

The brass rubbing procedure is basically simple Once a brass mold is chosen, a strong paper is taped securely to the sides of the brass. The wax. made in England especially for brass rubbing, is chosen. It can be one of several colors that contrast with the color of the paper selected. The original wax used was called "Heel Ball and was intended to blacken the heels of boots.

Then, gently, you rub the wax^r^ng the-brassr-

etched into the brass. Once that figure is established on the paper, you continue to rub. though much harder, until you have darkened the figure to your liking and all the outline is properly filled in. You can also do your brass rubbing in multicolors. This is more time consuming. but is delightful to the eye to those who prefer color to the simpler black and white. You may then take your rubbing home for mounting or choose your own matting and framing from the wide variety available at the shop.

Worthwhile Challenge Robert Gatling was the .Assistant Director of State Government Administration under Gov. Moore from 1964-1969. It was during those last days of the .Moore administration that talk was begun of the forthcoming -499th-eetebratK)nT^---

shaping and defining the outline of the figure which is

Later, due to a physical condition which no longer

allows him to travel a great deal, Gatling moved back to his home in eastern North Carolina. Here, he went to work on his idea of a business which would incorporate his knowledge of England during the Elizabethan period, and which would also be of special interest to people during the 400th celebration.

Though brass rubbing was little known and would most likely be difficult for people to understand. Gatling considered it a worthwhile challenge.

The Gatling brasses were on tour this spring in the new North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, Galting has also been invited to display them, in several other museums, in churches and military bases.

In ttie spring of 1984, a major teleivison network will be doing a feature on the -400th celebration -whielv w411 also include the Gatling brass rubbing shop.

Began With 30 Brasses

The Gatlings began with around 30 brasses. Today they-have close to 100. When time permits. Gatling gives mini-lectures on his brasses to anyone interested.

The room at the Manteo shop in which the brass rubbing from molds takes place is known as the "Tudor Hall." Here, a display of brightly colored flags from many countries hang suspended from the sides of ceiling. The brasses are organized on desk tops and leaned against the four walls of the room, where thev can

America's 400th Articles

W01

I507-I5ltHistoric Chicamacomico At Rodanthe Is Being Restored

Text And Photo By Jim Dumbell, Charlotte Observer

RODANTHE (AP) - The main structure and the outbuildings huddle down into a

protective tangle of oaks and myrtle bushes, as though trying to get away from the

ravages of the wind and sea.

The buildings were last white-washed in 1939, and

they have turned a pale silvery color in the years of sunlight and salt air since

then. They seem to have grown feet down into the sand, as though they'd been there a hundred years. Indeed. one of the smaller buildings, the boat house, has been there 109 vears.

SILVERY BUILDINGS STILL SURVIVE ... Jim Henry, president of the Chicamacomico Lifesaving Historial Association, stands on the grounds of the Chicamacomico Lifesaving

Station at Rodanthe, on the Outer Banks. Behind Henry is the main building of the complex of buildings now being restored. (AP Laserphoto by Jimmy Dumbell, The Charlotte Obsserver)

This is the Chicamacomico Lifesaving Station, some 30 miles south of Manteo on N.C, 12, a historic spot in the annals of the sea and the Outer Banks. It is a ghost station now. a museum.

Much of the time now there is only one person around. Jim Henry, a 62-year-old retired Civil Aeronautics Board official whose love of the station is exceeded only by his love of the area. His title is more pretentious than he is - president of the non-profit Chicamacomico Lifesaving Historical Association. His is a labor of love.

He and 120 other members of the group have determined the old station will be restored to the way the old federal Lifesaving Service, and later the Coast Guard, kept it - neat, clean and orderly.

The oldest building was erected in 1874, one of the first seven life-saving stations on North Carolinas Outer Banks. Later, others were built to rescue seafarers whose vessels foundered

on the storied shoals of the. Graveyard of the Atlantic.

The museum is closed until spring, but as Henry walks the grounds and unlocks the buildings to check their condition. each piece of equipment brings forth stories of heroism beyond the call of duty.

In those days, boys and men of the Outer Banks earned their living from the sea or they joined the Life-saving Service. Their descendants live on Hatteras Island today, many bearing the name Midgett, a name found often on the rolls of the lifesaving crews.

In the boat house stands a large surfboat with its long oars, the type crewmen launched through the surf, then rowed to sea, day or night, fair weather or.foul, to save lives.

Many shipwrecks were close to land, so a lot of rescues were made off the beach. There is a breeches buoy, a life ring with pants that survivors put their legs through to be hauled to safety.

There are old photographs of the Lyle gun, a bronze cannon that could fire a projectile over a distressed vessel as much as 500 yards away. The shipwrecked seamen would haul on the light iine carried by the

projectile until they pulled aboard a heavy towrope that provided their escape from the sea.

There are accounts of, some of the more memorable rescues performed by the men of the station. The Straitherly, for instance, a l,2:]6-ton,' schooner-rigged screw steamer wrecked in 1891. The surfmen rescued seven of its crew but 19 more drowned The British tanker Mirlb was torpedoed by a German submarine in 1918. The Mirlo carried a crew of 52 and a cargo of^gasoline. The vessel exploded and spewed burning gasoline and oil on the sea until the very ocean was afire.

The surfmen rowed into that fire to save survivors Six hours later. Id of the tanker's crew were dead. But the surtmen of Chicamacomico station had saved 42 and were honored throughout the nation for bravery.

Times changed .Sail uaye way to steam. Meteorologists learned to forecast weather more accurately. Navigators used radio and other aides to fix their position, precisely. The helicopter proved a splendid rescue vehicle In 1954, the Coast Guard, which had swallowed the old Lifesaving Service, closed

the Chicamacomico station. It fell into disrepair and for a time it looked as if the elements might claim it.

"But in 1976." Henry said, "Walter and Joanne Davis bought it and later gave it to the historical association."

Davis is a native of eastern North Carolina who became a Texas oil magnate but still has a home on the Outer Banks.

A -'Since then, weve gotten S44.000 m state and federal grants and contributions from individuals and this is being used in restoration," Henry said. "We estimate another S300.00 is needed to complete the job, and we hope to raise it through grants from the state and private foundations and from private contributions

Henry also is looking for artifacts, accounts and photographs of the station from the 1874 to 1915 period.

This winter, the roof of the main building will be replaced and the doors and windows removed and refinished. The exterior trim will be painted and June l the station will open to the public again-free.

Last summer, about 10,000 visitors walked through the old buildings and looked at and laid their hands on the artifacts left behind- by heroic men of anotherAiihe.

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Day War OGene Scott (SPN) Personal Computer (USA) Sports Probe 1:30 a Love That Bob eOONews

(SPN) Movie At War With The Army (1951) Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis. (1 hr., 55 min.)

(USA) NBA Basketball Milwaukee Bucks at Philadelphia 76ers (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

1:35 (SHOW) Movie SUcey (No Date) Anne Randall, Christiana Raines. (1 hr., 25 min.)

(HBO) Movie Absence Of Malice (1981) Paul Newman, Sally Field. (1 hr., 56 min.)

1:45 (iaN) Sportswoman (R) 2:MeBachalor Father mjuNews

OCBSNewiNightwatch 0 Movie Days Of Glory (1944) Tamara Toumanova, Gregory Peck. (1 hr., 55 min.) OJimBakker 2:15 (ESPN) SportaCenter 2:300 Life Of Riley QADInTheFamUy _(ESPN) Horae Radng Weekly

(R)^    

S:00e 700aab ONewi

OLowdlLanditrom (SHOW) Movie The Toy (1982) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason. (1 hr., 40 min.)

(ESPN) FWd Hockey NCAA Division I Championship (R) (1 hr., 30 min.)

3:39 (SPN) Mode Brothers Of The West (1937) Tom Tyler. (1 hr., 39 min.)

;taMN

1st Annual Trade-In On Nursing Shoes

Regardless of brand or condition worth $5 towards any pair of shoes during trad^in time.

Any shoes in good condition will be donated to charity.

J.A/S

Uniforms

1708 W. 6th St. 752-2426

(NIOD The Tomorrow Peojrfe

The Lost Gods Will the Tomorrow People be sacrificed to ancient spirits? (Part 2)

momcub oe0DynMtyg a a The Facta Of Life Jo s

plan to reunite her parents is frustrated by her fathers proposed marriage, g O O Mode Drop^t Father (1982) Dick Van Dyke, Mariette Hartley. A middle-aged man leaves his advertising job and moves to a loft apartment with his youngest daughter when the

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Use Enhancers To Dress Up Your Jewelry

The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday. December 11,1983 Q.g

Birth

By JE.W.VE LESEM I FI Fainilv Editor

NEW YORK (UPl) -Enhancers are a jewelry ipdustry answer to the ques-^n of what to give for pristmas after diamonds, or pearls. Or instead of the old cufflinks you can't af-jord.

JThe Jewelry Industry Fashion Advisory Committee uses the word, enhancer, to describe add-ons that change "Oie appearance and dressUp Jewelry you already own -without spending a lot more

Bullock

Born to Mr. and Mrs Douglas Gene Bullock. Tarboro. a son. Chad Douglas, on Dec 5. 198:i, in Prtt Memorial Hospital

monev.

For example, gold jackets itiake diamond stud earrings Appear larger and fancier. Gold button covers make rdinary shirt buttons' look (ike cufflinks.

; Gold or gem-studded dasps can make pearl necklaces appear shorter or more elaborate and dramat

ic.

I Prices start around $15 for gold-filled button covers or about $50 to $60 for solid gold, says Michael D, Roman, .executive director of the Jewelers of America, a trade association with 12.000 members nationwide.

Diamond-studded button covers run a litdle higher, say. $75 to $125. Roman said n a telephone interview.

' Button covers are not a new idea, he said! They go back 50 vears.'

The least expensive ones are plain. They can also be monogrammed.

""A simple gold clasp for pearls costs about $20," he 5aid^^l\Add a smalljliamond or more and the price may >0 to $250-$500, I have seen :hem as high as $1,000.

Maintenance for traffic lights, planting of trees, removing trees, pruning, grass cutting, and maintencance of median strips and other small gardens is provided by the Public Works Department,

reenaouiC

Poinsettias

Fresh Cut Trees Wreaths Ribbons And Bows

2531 Dickinson Ave. Ext.

Mon.-Sat., 9:00-6:00 Sun., 1:30-5:30

v\\V'' V \\ \ V \\\w\\\'

^ You can attach a bale Hoop) on the end and add a pendant "

;That may add an fstimated $75 to $100 to the cost. Roman said.

qiStOllK

Donato Marrone!

New Arrival Of Mert's Genuirw Leather

If you opt for diamonds, rubies or other colored gems, the price may range into the thousands.

Gold jackets for earrings also have a wide price range - $25-$200, depending on design and size. Stamped gold is the cheapest. Roman said. Cast gold costs more because it requires more of the precious metal. Jackets of coiled gold wire are about $125, depending on the diam^ eter of the wire and the amount used.

U.S. Mixtures From Around The World

Shoes & Boots

Sizes 11-13

*39.99

Ladies

Winter Shoes

Buy 1 Pair &

Get 2nd Pair

Layaway, MasterCard. Visa Hours: Mon.-Sat., 10-6

West End Circle Memorial Drive

For a totally different look. Roman suggested jackets with drops and loops.

Pave diamond jewelry -small stones closely set - is popular this year and represents yet another way of looking opulent for less, he said.

Because small stones are abundant and never rose in price like larger ones._ Roman said, you can get jewelry paved" with diamonds at a fraction of the cost of a diamond solitaire about the same diameter

ELKS CLUB FOR RENT

Meeting Hall With Seating Capacity for 350 People Game Room (Pool Table, Bar, Juke Box) Full Kitchen Facilities

Perfect For: Wedding Parties Class Reunions, Etc. Call Herman at 758-0880

By TOM HOGE AP Wine and Food Writer What is American cooking? It can best be described as a mixture of regional cuisines all over the United States, plus a host of varied dishes from around the world.

There isnt any one kind oGAmerican cooking, notes cooking school director and writer Richard Nelson. He has just completed the arduous tSak of producing s cookbook billed as American, with more than 500 recipes devoted to the tare of our land. (American Cooking. New American Library. 1633 Broadway, New York, NY 10019, s-ia.so.)

There is only one regional cuisine, as far as I am concernd, and that is the Cajun or Creole cuisine found in southern Louisiana that hasnt changed, he said in an interview. Elsewhere there are no regional cuisines in America anymore. They are all mixed up.

Americans tend to move about their homeland more than people in other lands. And as they move many take aldng favorite dishes from theib home region. As a result. New England cooking may crop up in the Pacific Northwest, and Southern dishes, such as home-fried chicken, can be found almost anywhere.

Add to this the ethnic dishes of Europe, Latin

America and elsewhere that are now American standbys, and you are left with no particular cuisine.

Nelson hastened to add. however, that there are native American specialties dating back to colonial days that form the basis for much of what we eat.

**Trxb/i nnv nA*n /ijcb. Ha

f*ltj VVl 1    \Aiw4,    ..w

said, "potatoes, too. America has given these two staples to the world.

' U think Ariiei icari food will go right on improving. he said. We have an endlr Source of superb foods readily available to us.

Nelson was born in South Dakota, and grew up enjoying a wide assortment of home-style dishes cooked by his maternal grandmother. During boyhood, he would comb the countryside for wild mushrooms, fruit and nuts, not to mention fish and game.

Shellfish were a favorite and his book abounds in

recipes for lobster, shrimp, scallops and oysters. Some are gourmet specials, but others, such as this recipe for hot clam pie, have the home touch.

3 garlic cloves, minced 1 large onion, minced

-^ 2 ribs celery, minced

1 large carrot, minced

4 tablespoons butter

2 cups parsley, chopped

2 pints clams, minced

3 cups toasted breadcrumbs

pound bacon, minced Juice 1 lemon

4 bay leaves, chopped Sait and pepper to taste Pastry made from

1 box of pie crust mix

(To obtain other recipes, taken mostly from Tom Hoge's Gourmet Corner over the past years, send $2 for your copy of "101 Recipes" to Gourmet Corner. AP Newsfeatures. 50 Rockefeller Plaza. New York. NY 10020.)

Farmvillc Furniture Company

A Complete Home

Uurnishinss^^ntor Furniture-Carpct-Draperv

Oriental Rugs

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Fwniture^ Company

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Saute garlic, onion, celery and carrot briefly in butter, without browning. Combine with rest of ingredients except pastry and blend lightly. Place* in two-quart casserole and top with pastry. Bake about 45 minutes in 325-degree oven, until crust is slightly brown.

fA.B.Whitky

Announces

Seiko's beautiful values.

Time will show her just how superb they are.

Happy Holidays Sale With

On All Wallcoverings In Stock

10% Off

On All Home Accessories Also

Discontinued Wallpaper Great For Gift Wrapping Or For Lining Cabinets And Shelves

All Seiko Quartz owners count their watches among their valuables. But these Ultra Thin Dress watches are so thin and costly looking, so totally feminine and beautifully finished, that we must point them out as outstanding buys. All in all, top-flight design expressed in exceptional quality. The Continuous Circlet, goldtone or silvertone. The Linked Baguette with faceted crystal, all goldtone, or with a brown dial. The Leather Strap Baguette, goldtone with gilt dial.

Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers

Your Independent Diamond Jeweler

758-2452

SEIKO

407 Evans Nall Downtown Greenville if It Doesnt Tick. Tock To Us

$100

Discontinued Fabric Samples Great For Pillows And Slip Covers

Each

Sale Ends December 23rd

A.B.Whitky

Per Roll

Merry Christmas

From All Of Us At

A Tradition Of Quality Since U)49 1311 West 14th Street Phone 752-7131





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uni^rWhir

by Hal Kaufman

a MAIL CALL! It's possible to receive a greeting card from Al in Albany, Glen In Glendale, Jack in Jacksonville, etc. Similarly, from whence might you hear from Phil, Mil, Bill, Lou, Ann, Bev, Rich and Charles?

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o What say? If 10 inches is shorter than one foot, say 'wrong,' unless 13 inches is not shorter than one foot, in which case say 'right.' What say you?

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o Riddle Me This! Whal's Ihe fastest way to send a wig? Hair mail. What's the fastest way to remove wet paint? Sit on it.

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MINIATURE X WORD

Answer each of the definitions below with a word ot tour letters,, and place the words In the horizontal spaces above. It answers are correct, they will form B word square -- that Is to say, words will read alike both across and down.

1. A favorite toy, especiailylor girls.

2. U.S state round at the ends, high in the middle.

3. Animal known as "King'oftheBea^s."

4. He wore a black mask and a white hat: The    Ranger.

MO 1

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LIKE SOI Add the followmg colors neatly to the scene above: 1Red. 3Lt. blue. 3Yellow. 4-Lt. brown. S-Flesh. 6-Lt. green. 7-Ok. brown. 8-Lt, purple. 9-Dk. purple. 10-Dk. blue.

WARM WELCOME! An important portion Of above i^ missing. Insert lines to complete Jhe

wing

lure.





The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

CoocherScuffleOveilate

By The Associated Press Boys will be boys on the basketball court, even when the boys are the coaches.

Marshall L'niversity romped to an easy 99-72 victory over New Hampshire Friday night in the first round of the Marshall Memorial Tournament. But the routine was broken by a scuffle between Marshall Coach Rick Huckaby and New Hampshire assistant Bob Barry after the New Hampshire coaches complained to Huckaby about Marshall using a full-court press when it led by 30 points.

"I apologized to my players." Huckabay said after

the game. "1 told them I didn't want them acting the way I did. But it's hard when somebody throws it right in your

face."

There were no Top 20 teams in action Friday night, although there were a number of tournaments on an otherwise light schedule.

In other games of note. South Alabama captured the 'ColoniaT Classic by defeating Auburn 95-73 as Terry Catledge led the way with 21 points.

Greg Grant's basket with 12 seconds left gave Utah State an 83-81 win oyer Brigham Young in the first game of the

Cougar Classic. Lamar beat St. Mary's 61-57 in the second

game.

Michael Cage's 25 points led San Diego State over Oklahoma City 68-58 in the Tulsa Classic, then Tulsa romped over Long Island University 126-80.

California topped Pacific 56-32 and Southern Cal downed Penn 82-62.

fir the other fame-of-the-Marshall Classic. Texas Christian edged Idaho State .53-52 on Dennis Nutt's 15-foot jumper withfive seconds left.

The scuffle in the Marshall-New Hampshire game came with two minutes

left after New Hampshire Coach Gerry Friel walked over to the Marshall bench and said something to Huckaby.

Friel walked back to his bench and Huckaby followed him. Barry tried to intervene, but Huckabay shoved him aside, then both benches emptied and a 15-second shoving match ensued before theoff icials restoredorder_

"He was behind 30 points and he lost his head, I guess." Huckabay said. "He came over to me and said. '. . . You're no-class.'"

"I just couldn't believe it. I went over to ask him what he

had said. He wouldn't talk to me and his assistant came up and told me to get away from the bench. I told him I was talking to the coach and told him to sit down.

Friel said he had become angry because Marshall was using a full-court press.

LaVerne Evans had -16 points for Marshall, which won its third game without a ^s.. . , -

Other Games

victory over Campbell in the first round of the James Madison Invitational Tournament. Fairleigh Dickinson edged Northern Illinois 65-64 in the second

Jeff Tucker scored 18 points as Morehead State defeated Western Michigan 95-70.

Rick Resetich had 18 points to lead Western Illinois to a 70-61 win over Cincinnati.

game.

Brian Wilson scored 21

Southern Illinois topped le first

Greg Mosten's 6-foot jumper gave James j^adison a 63-6U

points to lead Illinois-Chicago past St. Francis. Pa., 110-90 in the opening round of the Manufacturers Hanover basketball tournament in New Rochelle. N.Y, Then Steve Burtt scored 19 to lead host Iona past Brown 72-59.

Columbia 68-65 in the game of the Busch Classic, then Mercer edged Alcorn State 103-101.

Fullerton State topped Centenary 76-74 in the Champion Holiday Classic after Tennessee Tech topped Montana 68-61.

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Havelock Holds Off A-G

HAVEL()(;K Havoiock High School held off Ayden-Grifton's rally in the final quarter Friday night tor a 51-46 victory, handing the Chargers their first loss ot the year.

Ayden-Gnfton's girls also came out on the short end ot the score, bowing. 71-37 "We really weren't mentally ready to play." Coach Bob Murphrey said atterwards as the Chargers went down to _defeat tor the iirsl time in tour outings. The LailTThaiws are now (1-4 on the year Havelock eased out into the lead in the tirst period of the

ITmt^kFtakiiira^llH^^ Dixon'meU 10 for ihb STpanUhildp had 12and.Pat

The Hams continued to pull away in the second period, running the lead out to 29-20 by intermission AydemGrilton rallied in the third quarter, however, out-M'oring the Rams, 1.5-7, to cut the lead back to 36-35 going into the last period. But the Chargers were unable to get a lead and keep it. moving up by one with about six minutes left before tailing behind again andfaihngtocatchup:

Ha\ eFock was led in scoring by Bryant with 15l while Ronnie Caldwell had 14 Marvin Smith had 20andMike

Chargers.

Havelock's girls pushed out into a 13-8 lead aftbr one period, and managed to tack one more point on that in the second period, taking a 24-18 lead into the dressing rooms.

But in the third period, the Lady Rams crushed the Chargers, 28-12. running the lead out to 52-30, The Rams finished off Ayden-Grifton. 19-7 in the final period.

Havelock placed six. players in double figures in the game, led by Jenny Bell with 16. Shannon Stovel added 14. while Karen Johnson had 13.

Abel had 10. Cora Faison led the Lady Chargers with a game high 26,

.Ayden-Grilton returns to action on Tuesday, entertaining North Lenoir.

,IV (.anie: .Ayden Grifton HI. Havtl(K'k 57! OTi

Girls Gaiiif \Men-(irifton i:!7i Faison 12 2-:i 2H, Durant 1 1-5 1 links 1 0-1 2. Murphy l o-l 2. (iunler

0 2 4 2. M(K)re 1,0-0 2. McC'otler 0 o-o 0. .Artis 0 0-0 0, Mort 0 0-0 o, Whitfield II 0-0^0. Edmunds 0 o-o 0. Barfield o o-o o totals 16.5-J5 :i7, Haxeloek i7l i

Bell 7 2-:i lo. .Stovel fi 2-;i 14. Johnson 5 :i-5 i:i, Childers 5 2-6 12. Abel 5 0-:! lo. Brown 1 0-0 2. Roberts

1 0-0 2. Norris 1 o-o 2, Chapman o o-o 0. Mvers o o-o o. Luzadder 0 o-o o.

Beddingfield Repeats With Win Over Jags

Wrtson 0 (Ml 0.

O f! 4!

Totals ;ii 0-20 71.

\\den-(iri(loii....,.S to 12    7:17

lla\eloek............M    il    2S    10-71

STAMoNSBCKt; Wilson B e d d,i n g 11 e 1 d h :i n d e d , Farmvil-le Central its second loss 01 the young seasnn Frida v night, taking a 44-29 decision ow.'r the Jaguars Farmville's girls, how ever, came away with iheir seeont!

W!fl,47.Al    .....

Both ot the .laguar losses and both ot the Lady Jaguar wins have come with ,Bedding! leld. The Jag' are 1-2 while the girls are now 2-1 The Bruins eased out into a . 1(4-6 lead in the iir<t quarter o; the boys' game, hutvcouldtit shake ihe Jaguars in the third, period Both teams pushed through'1.1 point' as the ,'core

climbed to 23-l'9    ............

In the third period, Bed-dingtield managed a little more o! a lead., outscoring Farmville. 7-4. to lead :.o-2:!. Then, in the nna! period die Bruins out'hi; the .Lrguars. !4-'i

towm going away.

Eric Butts led Beddingfield with 16 points while Andre Peaks- added 12. Kent Hardv was high lor Farmville with 11. ' '

In the girls' contest, Farmville 'hot away early. Jiydding up a 19;lu lead after one quarter The action slowed 111 the second period, hut the.lead didn't change. Each team scored eight to make it 27-18 at intermission.

In the third period. Bed-dingtield inched closer.__ cutting It back to 35-29. But Farinville held the Bruins off fiy matching points in the final quarter to take the win,

- Lisa Lang, led Farmville with i:l points while Joy Feaden added 12. Jackie ..Thompson led Beddingfield with 13 points.

FarniMlle. follow ing a Sat-urda'. night encounter with

Bertie, was to host D.H. Con-lev on Tuesdav

.IV (.;

Fiirmvil

Ilf:    IGmIcIi    n    p    f    11'Ilf lo;

Central fi    '

Boys (ainc \\den-(irifliin i I6i

Smilh K 4-6 2(1. l)(\n 5 ti :i lu, Neulon 2 2-:i 6. Peterson :i (Ml 6, Woods 1 0-0 2. 1) Anderson o 2 7 2. B Wiggins 0 0-0 0. Thompson 0 o-o o Totals I! S-l't 16.

Ilaveloek (511 Bryant 5 5-6 15. Caktwell 5 4 4 14. Moore 4 0-0 . Kotrerson 1 2-:i 4, .lenkins 2 1-2 5. Bell 2 0-1 4. Blaneoo i^21. Ho'seOO-OO Totals lit i:!-ix5i.

\\den-(iriftoii i:(    7 15 II16

llaveloek .,,,16 11!    7 t.5-51

Peugeot reinvents the

big wagon

'It' Bigger than the K'st-'cllmg rnipd'rtcJ (w .\nicrk;i!i ungons.

W ith It' Inivk.

.'c.ii up, ft Iw'lJ'

c\cn nrKwc than the h('lJ-I'MT Jni("aur' trom Pctriut.

r [dca snrtr 'urpri'cthi' i' t'lic I'lg wagiui rhai 1' slc'tgncJ nof to w-ng it' ta , luiri'ilv tnuD 'iJc to 'wlc (Ui the htg

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WcNc got It. Cioinc and trv it.

PEUGEOT

Joe Cullipher Chrysler-PIymouth-Dodge Peugeot

L15-

3401 S. Memorial Dr.

Greenville. N.C.

tiirls tiaine I- ariin die ( eolral (l< i

Joyner Deaden 6 Wiihains-'i

[l.ir! ; 0-0 Nev\ton .! 0-0 LaiiK 6 t-s- 1 Totals 22 1-1 17.

Beddinulield < tO

11 IliHisei J v-i (. U) nin

1-6Thompson 6 1-4 IJ. Burn; 2, Korns 0 (1 (I. F.irmer 1 Bullard .1 o-o'6.. ,lenkins (( Totals 17 7-2:: II.

Farnuillcl ..........m x    '

Beddinntield.........H( s II

j l!o\st.aMie Farnit die ( eolral 20(

Barnes 2 o-(( 4. Evans .! tiard.s .1511 11, Mo.u-0(1-0 0. 0 2-2 2. Taylor o 2-2 2, Vines : Baker (I ((-(io Totals lOK-15 20. Beddin<4lield (l|(

Butts 6 4-5 Ui. Bynum 1 Deaks 4 4-4 12. Thompson 1 Eduards 1 ((-o 2. Jones I Darker 1 o((2 Totals 15 il-ls I

Farimillel ..,..6 i:i I

Beddinulield  10 i;i 7

0-0 ti.

Hagin : ((-0 4.

2 2 4.

1-2 :i. d.) f),

G.'!

!i-n

prices effective Mon-Sat. Sale ends Dec. 17

The Saving Place ^

summsm winter

FOOTWEAR

FOR IHEN. WOMBLftRffiS

Walker. Leads Edenton Past Roanoke, 53-43

EDENTiiN Du'.id Walker fired in 21 p(iin!;7. .mi! B"dne\ Leigh added 17 imu'c a.s Edenton Holmc' deteated Roanoke ,'(3.-43 in a Nor'hcast-ern 3-A t'onierence clash Frida \

The Edenton girls needed 28 points irdin Stephanie Ellod! to rally past Ie.ii.cKe 62-47 Monique Ward .idued 1(( tor Edenton, -while the l.ady Leo skins were, paeefi ny Gloria Duggins with 22 ciiid Teresa' Brown with M James Duggins led the Ked-

skins -.Mth 15 points while Derrick Boyd chipped in Id.

Roanoke trailed h-5 at the end of the iirsl quarter and (inly 16-14 at h;ilttime. But Edenton out.scored the Redskins 37-29 in the second half tor the margin of victory.

The Lady Redskins slipped '0 1-1 in the conference and 2-2 ()\erall. while he lioys team slid '(I M and l-Joverall

Edenton'6'J I Ellioii i;f 2-K 2K, Ward 4 2-6 K(. Simpsini : l0. W l,i\erman ! 1-5 7. C Liverman 2 (((( 4. Sattertield 1 ((-(12. While 1 (((( 2 Totals 27 h-j:: 62.

Hoanoke.............II    12 II    717

Edenton.............. 5    22 17 lx-62

(ill Is ii.inie llo.Mlnke ' 17 <

iHiUgiu-s lo 2 2 22. Te Bi'Okll 5 i-5 1.1 Mkmson 4 (1-1 6. Randolph 1 d-2 2, Ta Brimn I o o 2, Bell 1 o-o 2

lol.ll' -I l-l" (.

Boys (.ame Roanoke ( C!i Duggins 6 :i-;l 15, Boyd 5 n-l lo, .1 limes 2 0-0 4. Hennell 2 14 .5. Baker 1 1 1 4, Chanee 1 (i-ii 2, Edge o 2-2 2, Hines I o 02 Totals Ih7-|o t;;. Edenton 541 w.dker    !(    4H 21, Leigh 6    ,5 ,5 17,

Miller 2    5    7 f).    .Smith    2    U-1 4,

Dimnum o 12 1, Holley o 1 ,f 1 Totals III 1.5-25.54. ' .

Roanoke...............5    ')    16    J414

Edenton...............6 l    Ml    IS.54

West Craven Holds Off Pant Pack Rally, 69-60

VA.Ni 'EBi iFu I Mike Tripp score 9 p(jints and T.m ('ox and Mickey Hasfjerry added 14 each as Wc't ('raven held

,J\ t.anie W:

Wa'Ti'ni;.,' <

(iiiM.

ot! Washington (iH-tio Frida\ in high school basketball action.

Glenda Daily's 24-point per-tormance led the Lady Pam Pack to a 42-3h victory over West ( raven Washington held a slim 19-17 lead at halttime but pulled away to an eight-

point advantage in the third period before the Lady Eagles trimmed the margin in the fourth quarter Jeff Cox led the Pam Pack with 2(1 points, while Lance King chipped in 14 and Earl Randolph 12

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14 7 Han.'. 0 I nh'i 0 (I 1-0 i H)l'o 12.

West ( ravoii

DdU--    f

4 f-*i

7 Po'.-rs.,' Totals II 11-2 Washington WosI ( rj\rli

West Carteret Eases Past Washington

II II '(--12

II

Ko\(laiiii'

Wdshinuton 60

Dl.xon 1 ((-6 2 Alston i ((-o (l, Randolph 4 4-512. King 7 o-o 14. ( ox 7 6-6 20. Dudley 1 (Mi 2. Hollovtay 1 o-(( 2 Rogers 1 o 12, .lohnson o (i-(( (( S(anlevO(MMl Totals25 K6I2 60. WcsK raten 6ft(

W ilkin.' 0 o-o ((. Seoti o (Mi o .Iones 2 5-6 0 Rasfn-rr. I o-o 2 ( o.x 7 o-o 14, Da\tson 0 12 1 Tripp H !-4 10, (liKKlman o 2 2 2 Cfouell 4 o l 6, Rasf>erry 7 o-2 14 Total' 2!< 11-17 6'(

Washington.........12 2 in Me-60

West ( raxen.......II 22 lo 246!i

.MnHEllE.AD ( ITV - West ( arieret gained a pm in the 195-pound class and eased out a .19-27 wrestling \ ictory over Washington High .Schcxjl Friday night

West Carteret took wins in eight ot the 13 weight classes during the match, and the loss dropped the Pam Pack to 2-2 on the vear

in a Northeastern Conference match.

Summary;

Wa.shingtbn returns to action on Wednesday, hosting Plymoth and Roanoke Rapids

ne - .McCormick WC p Warner, 2 57

15-Landen W p Johnson. 0.57 112-lgnicki(W'C p Cutler.3'54. 119-Bnggs Wt(d Stokes. 8-4 126- Phalen IWI p Culpepper 4:52 132-Locklear (WC id Hams. 8-7 138 - Coviperthwait WC p Sal terthwaite, 4 23 145-Ferguson W p Peele.3;45 155 - Reed (WC ip Key. 2:45 167 - .Nevtsome (WC (o. Latham. 4-2 185 - Szymeczek (W i d. Nielson. 5-3 195-.Mulwee(WC(p Jackson.2:37 Hm-CulrelDWUp Glanccy,3:51

I.





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You see, Toyotas reliability and documented low .incidence of repairs,means that new or u|ed, you get a very dependable car for your money.The Largest Selection

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0\r 30 previously owned Toyotas in stock now!

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^    Coupon    expires    12/12/83.    Limit    one    coupon    per    customer.    ca/>a

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Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer

109 Trade Street/Greenville/756-3228    -





g.^0 The Daily Reflector, Graenvllle, N.C. Sunday. December 11.1983

SCOREBOARD

TANK HFNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

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Pridai'sliaiiies \o paTnprrisrhedtited

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Bullaloat Boston Monlreal at VVastiinplon Philadelphia at Nevi Jersey Winnipeg al llartlord Calgarval Tornillo Kdmorilonal Vaneouver _i)elroit at SI l.ouis N V Islanders at Minesir

Qui-beraPl:t)s .\ngeles ---------------

Sunday s (laines Winnipeg al Bnsliin Bullaloat Philadelphia Monlreal at Pillsburgh Delroil al Chieago

NFL Standings

R\ I'he \ssiH iaied Press Viiieriianl oiilereiue Kasi

tt I. T Pel Ph

pr-p-si 714 124-

Seallle    7    7    0    >00

Kansas I'lly    .7    0    o     .177

San Uiego    5    o    o    :i.77

National ('nCerenee Kasi

\ Dallas    12    2

X Washiiigion    12    2

SI Louis    (i    7

:i2 :I70

Delroil Dreen Bay Minnesota Chieago Tampa Bay

,i 1 Cenlral

K I.

(I    K.7

I    4112

II    :l.77

1    i.ill

   K    II

2 12    II

-

2H7 JIK) .107 271 - 200 -

240 407 ill.7 207

1, A Bams    K    0    o    .771    :12H

Sa'n L'raneiseo    K    (i    o    .771    .107

New I irleans    7    7    0    .Too    277

Allanta    0    8    0    420    :117

y -elinehed division Idle 'x-cimehed playoll spot

Saliirdav. Dee 10 Pillshurghal New York .lels

'^':\rl.inia-jrMranit- - ------------^

- ;s>umlax.^Dee, 4J -

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Bllalo

tiiieUx

Monlreal

llaflinfti

lo 10 10 11

114 107 141. 10.7

   11    .17    1    27    112    117

~TTTr -= 3-==4lir 1h7 ( aiiiphellt iiiilereiue Norris lli\isioii

V Miami Bllalo New Kngl.iiid N 7 .lets Balliniore

Pillslmrgh

Cleveland

Cineinnaii

tjjuxsiian

V 1, A Kaiders 11 Ilenver    8

8 0

i 247 I '202

2'I0

117

244

200

2141

Chieagoat Minnesota

Cleveliindat llouslon

San Kraneiseoal Bllalo

Seallleal New Vorkdianis

Delroil al Ciheinnati

New (Irleans al Philadelphia

Kans.isCity al San Diego

New Kiigland al Los Angeles Kams

SI Louisal Los Angeles Kaiders

Balliniore al Denver

Washmglon al Dallas

Monday. Dee. 12 Creen Bay al Taiiipa Bay

College Basketball

Itv The Vssiu ialed Pres K \S I

Calholie io K Mennonile,\a Kdoilioroo:!. Allianee 71 Framingham St 77, Tulls 00 liannoii78, si John L'isher07 llunleiY-: I'CNA .7.1 I..iriHhe08 Pleiller07 Lehman 78. .lohn.lav 7.1

Cowboys Vs, Indions

Bv KE.\ RAFPOFOKT AF Sports Writer

It's the Cowboys against the "indians" Sunday - .Nat'ional Football League style

'i can't remember a Washington-Dallas game that has attracted as much national attention as this one has." says Tex Schramm, the-CowiJoys' president and general manager, "I don't remember when there were two teams so clearly ahead in the standings playing each other tor what amounts to the division championship."

01 the NFL's 11 games Sunday, this one stands out for many reasons, and not only becau>e the detendmg Super Bowl

champion Redskins and Cowboys are locked in a first-place tie in the National Conference East Division with 12-2 re-cords, the best in the NFL.

The Cowboys and Redskins have waged some of the most .rnemorabie wars in NFL history. Schramm will tell you.

"We killed the Redskins in 1979 for the NFC title when Roger Staubach threw two touchdown passes in the last two minutes for a 35-34 victory." said Schramm, who has witnessed the great rivalry since its inception in I960. "Then there was Clint Longley coming off the bench to win a Thanksgiving Day game,

"The Redskins have s beaten us like that, including the tough loss we had last

year in the NFC title game and the title gamean 1972under 'Georgei Allen "

Schramm finds the rivalry emotionally draining.

"1 like big games," said Schramm, "but 1 don t always enjby them."

The earlier meeting of the Cowboys and Redskins in the season opener was in keepi.ng with the excitement of the series, as the Cowboys rallied for a 31-30 victory. Dallas leadsthe series 28-17-2 and was the only team to beat the Rev. during their Super Bowl championship season last year.

"NFL rivalries are generally based on the competition in the standings." Schramm said.

_ .Maine 81. SL Francis.-V V 66    ,

Maryland-Ballimore (nunlv K.7, Spnnf!

Garden 77.20T RPI71. Ithaca liJ Salem lUO, Dyke 78 Scranlon83. Albright 70 SOlTH Athens SL 68. N Georgia HI Bluelield Coll 5. Appalachian Bible 72 I'alholicV 56. E Nfennonite .74 Christian Bros 77, Southwestern-

Memphi66    ,

JacKsonville St. 91, Limestone 75 .Morgan St. 84.'<?oppin St 67 Morris Brown62. Knoxville foL 60 NichollsSl 77, Prairie View 71 .Nicholis SL 77. Prairie View .71 Potsdam SI 94. Cortland SI 6't SamiordHl. Belmonl37 Shenandoah 95. Gallaudei 74 Stetson 81. (ieorgia Southern 68 VirginiaT'nion 76, .St Augustine s61 W Georgia 7:1, .Southern Tech 6:i Winston Salem 91. Virginia Si 89. (iT MIDWEST Alma no. Concordia 84    -

t'oe67. Illinois Coll ,74 Dakota Wesleyan 89. Dordi 84 Grace 78, Wodsler .7.7 .lamestown 84. Huron 67 Luther 87. Mount Senario 42 Marvcresl 97. Kocklord 81 Monmouth. Ill 87. Cornell, Iowa 7:1 MorcheadSI 97. W Michigan 70 Mount Mercv 61. Wartburg.77 Nebraska Weslevan 117. Colorado Col

88

Nebraska! Imaha 81. Doane 61 Oakland 98. Wis Parksule87 Peru SI 79. Dana 46

PurdueCalumel 68, Indiana Tech HI.

nr~ .

Si miison 78. T ark lo 72 Sioux Falls 67. Valley City St .76 Vmeennes 68. Sinclair .79'

W Illinois 7(1. Cineinnaii 61 Washington. Mo 61. Eureka .79 SDl TIIWKST

Baptist 40 Hendrix76. Bethanv Nazarene74 Ianhandle St 79. lienderson Si 7ii SE Oklahoma 6:i. I ot .Scienie & Arts

:>4

SI Edvv ards 68. How ard Pav ne .76 SI Marv s9:t. WileyHO Texas .\&I 711. Marv Hardin Bavlor68 E AR'WEST    -

AirforeeHtFMesaTo    ----

Brigham Young Havvan 61. S Flah Si

CalLullieran67.Claremoni MuddHl

Caisi Los Angeles .71, Biola:i8

Cai SI Vorlhndge 74. San Kraneiseo Si

.7:!

Caliloniia '>ii, Paeilie Hi Carroll MonI 68. K Montana .77 I'hieoSl 84. Oregon Tech 71 Christ. Cal . 67. Simpson. Cal ..76 Columbia Christian 82 Paedie Ore , Wi Fori Lew IS 48. Western St 81 George Fox 77, W Baptist 67    ^

(ioii/a-ga TH. Monlami SI 68 Greal Falls68. \W Nazareneii;)

LA Buplisl 102. Lite Bible76 N Ari?ona81.N Coloiado71 N IdahoColl 88, Highline67 lioekv Mountain 81. Diekinson Si 77 S Oregon 87 Sonoma SI .78 So r.ililornia82. Pennsylvania62 W.irner Iaeilie (H. Si'alile Paeilie 42 Wlnlworlh64. K Oregon 44

""    ' TOlltN\MENTS

\i|uinas First Itoiiiid .AijUinas 40 Kalaiii,i/(Mi76 I ihio Northern .78. Spring Arlxir 44

Bethel ( lassie

Bethel 88 tmti.iila South Bend71 (ii'.inil l!.i|inls Baplisl HI, \neilla64 Itevo Fi am is ( lassie First Itiiuiiri Ind Purdue Indianapolis 86. Bloom

lield. N ,1 o.

HioGrande40 Franklin 62 ,

Biiseh ShiMiloul First liiinnil Mereer lo.l .\leorn lol S Illinois 68 Col uni hi a 6.7

Chimpkm HoMay CUssie Eirst Bound

Kullerton St. 76. Centenary 74 Montana 68. Tennessee Tik'h 61 Collegiate Charity ( age ( lassie First Bound Allred 124. Misereordia 78 \Y167, SI NV Purchase 74 Colonial Classic Championship S Alabama 95. Auburn 7:1 Third Place Youngstown St 84. Florida AiM 69 Cougar ('lassie Eirsi Bound Lamarei.St Marv's.Cal 57 Utah SI 6!. Brigham \ oung 81 First Tulsa ( lassie E'irsl Bound SanDiegoSi 68.OklahomaCJv .78 Tulsa 126. Long Island C 80 Grralei Poughkeepsie \ulo Dealers Eirsi Bound .Mansi 77. Dartmouth 66 Rider 61. Colgate .78 llal

!3oogi Jl/lountaLn diiziiiinai L7ti

^Vt. 5, 'JSox O-C, J.uniL/2j, c\.C.

Ml oi us at the    G^vle.    invite    ^    J

(t the Carolina EatCn    special

iarnilytoconrebv^    ^

our Christmas trees an    ,    G,,enviHe customers

AStomers in

       n(    fresh.    North    Carolina

a no

special about

Christmas Tree Lo    .,    ,

for the opportunity to serve you and wis V

falter ( lassie Eirsi Round

Houston Baptist 68, .Mas.sachuselts .75 Stetson 81, Georgia Southern 68 Januw. Madison Invilalional First Round F'airleigh Diekinson6.7. .N Illinois 64 James Madison 6:i. Campbell 61. OT l.akrr Classic Eirsi Bound Dlivei 71. .Michigan Tech 52 Uike Sutx*rior SI 95. l^aurenlian 64 l.ynchhurg Invitalional First Bound Gl.isshoroSI 86. Averell .78 Salisbury St 71. Lynchburg67    _    _

Mamifucturrrs Hanover ( lassie First Bound    ,

111-Chicago I 111. St Francis. Pa 4ii Iona 72. Brown 59

Marshall Memorial Invilalional Eirsi Bound Marshall 44 New Hanipshire72

Monmoulh invitalional Eirsi Bound

Baptist 66, Md Eastern Shore I'si Monmoulh74, C S International62 Badford Inv ilational First Bound URiK'heliH Pleiller67

HadtordlURowje.si 411____,

SI. Lawremr-Kev Bank ( lassie

----- Eirsi    Round

Nazareth 6U. Concordia. Monlreal ,7;i ,S| l,awrenee4L Prall 6:i

SI. Thomas \uiiiiias llolidux Eirsi Roiiml Liberlv Baptist 87. Ml St Marv s. N Y

64

SL Thomas Aquinas 44. Anna Maria Coll .77

College Bowls

Kv The \ssm ialed Press The pairings for NC.\;V ITivision I V post soa'son bowl games .All' Times EST-

Saliirdav. Dee. In ImleiiemlemeRowl VI sbievepoi'l. La.

Air Eorte, 4-2. vs Mississippi. 6-7. 8 on p m

Saliirdav . Dee 17

.    ,    <    aliia    Bi>!-

\l Fresno. Caljl.

Northern Illinois. 4-2. vs Eullerion Stale. 7.4,4 pm

Florida ( ill IIS Bowl \l Orlando. Ehi.

Maryland. 8 i. vs rennessee,' 8 !. K p m

Ttiiirsdav. Dee. 22 Mall III Fame Bowl \l Bii iiiiiighaiii. \la.

West Virginia, 8 :i, vs Keiilueky. 6 4 I. 8 p m

Eridav.Dee 2:i iliiliiliiv Bowl \l San Diego, ( alii.

IX Brigham Vming In l vs -Missoun 7 4 4 p m

Saturday. Dee.24    Simflowt

\l El I'aso. Texas Alabama. 7 4. vs Southern Melhodisl. liFL:ip.m

Mondav. Dei. 26 Aloha Bowl \( Honolulu

Penn .Slate. 7-4-1 vs Washington. 8 :i 8 p m

Thursdav. Dei. 24 Liberlv Bowl \l Memphis. Tenii.

Noire Dame. 6 ,7 vs Boston College. 4-2.8 :liip m

Eridav . l)ee.;lil Peaih Bowl \t Mlania

North Carolina, 8 :i, vs Florida Slate. 6-.7, :l p m

(alur Bowl \l .laeksciiiville, Fla.

Iowa.4-2. Vs Florida 8 2 1 4pm Saturday. Dee.:il . Bliiehoiiiiel Bowl

ALHousIoh

Bavlor. 7 11, vs Oklahoma Stale 7-4 1. Bp m'

Monday. Jan. 2 (olloiiKowl \l Dallas

(ieorgia.B-l 1 vs Texas, il-n I iop in Fiesta Bowl \1 Tempe. \riy.

Ohio Slale 8-:i. vs Pillsburgh 8-21 1 :i(ip m

Bose Bowl \l Pasadena, ( alii.

Illinois lo l.vs I ('L.\ 6 4 1 7pm Orange Bowl \l Miami. Fla.

Nebraska. 12--it. AS Miaflii Ela-. lo L 8 pm/

Sugar Bowl \l New Orleans Auhiirn. 10 1 vs Michigan, o 2 I'.pni

lR)lden .Stale    1    

Seattle,    '    > 

Phoenix    o    i    T?

San Diego .

>'rida\ N (lanies

Boston 119. Denver 9IC

New Jersev inu. Philadelphia 9.i Indiana lu'i. .Atlanta 104 'Milwaukee 96. Cleveland IB Houston ll.7.Chicagoll2_.OT

San Antonio 126. Utah: 17 Portlands Deiroii 177 New A ork 111 . San Diego 92 Seattle 112 Dallas 124

524    4

476    7

:B:i * ,!I8    8'

By The Assw ialed Press

Men si ollege Basketh.ill

Virginia I nion76. SI Augustine s61

' _>V(imen s ( ollege Kaskelhall

W' Carolina Wi. Appalaehiansr'77'

I    I. .. L.', H* (    I    I    .    .___

~r rmornKv rirTta/vdTfipiTTn wt

Barber Sentla 84 Dav idson 72 Riehmnnd 82. N Carolma-Greenshoro

Wonieii'sSvvinimiiig

N CarnlimCB.N Carolina SI 46

NBA Standings

Bv riie Assm ialed Press eastern ( ONFERENt F Mlaiilii Division

H I Pel

Philadelphia    17    7    7.70

Boston    16    6    727

New York    14    8    m<

New Jersey    1    4    7'26

Washmglon    4    11    4,io

(eiilral Division Milvraiikee    14    o    ?

Allania    lo    11    476

Delroil    10    II    476

Cleveland    7    1.7    !18

Chicago    7    L!    278

Indiana    7    1,7    2.7o

WESTERN(ONFERENt F Miilwesl Divisiiin Dallas    1:    7    oTo

llah    12    10    .747

Denver    II    lo    .724

Kansas City    4    11    4.si

Houston    8    1.1    .ini

San Anionio    8'    17    !48

Paeilie Division Los .\ngeles    14    7    7!7

Iorll.md    It.    H    v'4-

WHERE DO YOU TURN FOR FINANCIAL COUNSELING?

Eddie M Walker. Jr.

Your accountant? Your lawyer? Your banker?

Good choices.

But you may be overlooking aribther importanT source of professional help in your Tianclal life.

We are highly trained and service-orienfed professionals who stay abreast of market trends and changes in the tax law that could affect our clients' financial planning.

Besides your personal security, we can bring you help in your business with IRA's, pension plans, buy-seli agreements and executive compensalioh packages.

When you have problems and you're looking lor answers, look to us.

Eddie M. Walker. Jr. Pittman & Assoc. 200 Eastbrook Or. Greenville. N.C. 752-6747 or 795-4993

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NBA Warns Teams Of Abuse; Signs Pact

NEW YORK (AP) - The National Basketball Association has warned the leagues 23 teams against abusing substitute officials during their final week of work before the regular referees return after a two-month lockout.

' The NBA and the referees union signed a new three-year contract Friday, ending a tabor dispute that sparked .widespread criticism and controversy over th quality of the substitutes.

- Commissioner Larry DBrien said the regular refs are expected "back on the basketball court where they belong" next Friday after a week of required physicals and briefings and the arrangement of travel schedules. Meanwhile, the league admitted it is concerned the substitute referees would be subject to increased abuse.

"Scotty Stirling (vice president of the NBA in charge of operations) sent a telex to all the general managers reminding them of rules regarding

proper conduct on the court, NBA spokesman Alex Sachare said. We are emphasizing that next week will be a delicate period."

Since the regular season started Oct. 28. the leagues position was that the substitutes did a reasonably competent job and improved steadily as the schedule progressed, They cited a dropoff in the number of foul calls and violence.

The union, however, strongly criticized the substitute officials and said they were ruining the flow of the fast-paced professional game. Union chief Richie Phillips cited significant increases in technical fouls and victories by home teams as evidence that the substitutes were not in control at games.

Many players and coaches also criticized the substitutes^^ and coaches Don Nelson of Milwaukee and Doug Moe were suspended for abusing the officials. Nelson elbowed one referee and Moe poured

water on another,

Coaches and players expressed relief when they learned of the settlement.

"Asking substitute referees to work in the NBA... was like asking your garbage collector to go out and produce an atomic bomb." said Bill Fitch, coach of the Houston Rockets,

1 have no animosity toward the men who worked our games, but had this continued intD early next year, I think we would have all gone into the loony bin.

Denvers Kiki Vandeweghe, the leagues second-leading scorer, said the subs improved as time went on, but they lowered the quality of the game."

Fridays settlement provides for a first-year pay scale of $28,000 for starting referees to $85,000 for those with 16 years experience, excluding playoffs, the contract, first-year refs will make $28,000 and 16-year refs $90,000.

Last season, the lowest-paid

referee earned $18.146, including the playoffs, while the highest-paid official earned $76,922. including playoffs. Counting the postseason, the top officials could earn $120,000 by the third year of the contract.

This settlement comes following two days and nights of intensive negotiations, during which the union negotiators dropped their demand for back pay4o^Gov4^thetime.noL worked during the dispute," OBrien said.

But Phillips, the unions executive director, said the referees dropped the retroactive pay demand in return for increased playoff money. He said federal mediator Ed McMahon, who was brought into the negotiations this week, was the key to settlement of the back-pay dispute. "He played a big role on

from none for six officials who did not work in the postseason to $21,000 for top referees. This season, Phillips said, every referee will get at least $3,000 for the playoffs and the top officials will get $27,000 extra, increasing to $30,000 in the third year.

The two sides interpretation of the resolution of the back pay issue was typical of their season-long disagreement. ------

On Friday, OBrien said. "This dispute was settled

The union, which has 29 re- Friday morning.    unanimous    among all the re

ferees, voted on the pact Phillips said approval was ferees who were reached.

were very firm in their stand on back pay, Phillips said.

The union chief said that playoff pay last season ranged

when the union took a more enlightened approach to the situation."

"We say the NBA became more enlightened and finally realized the importance of the officials to the game," Phillips said. "Each side says the other is wrong arid each side says the other became enlightened. Thats the way _ ar the way they all get settled."

The new contract was signed at the news conference announcing the settlement.

Orioles Deal Stoddard For Gross

' NASHVILLE. Tenn: (API-Baltimore's world champion Orioles tried to plug a hole at third base and^the Toronto Blue Jays hoped to correct the distinctly right-handed tilt of their pitching staff as baseball's winter meetings drew to a close.

The Orioles acquired Wayne Gross from Oakland to shore

up the one weak spot in their lineup and the Blue Jays, who used right-handers to start every one of their 162 games last season, acquired southpaw pitcher Brvan Clark.

Baltimore surrendered reliever Tim Stoddard to the As in exchange for Gross, and Seattle obtained outfielder

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The two deals ended the meetings Friday with 16 trades involving 34 major league players completed.

On the administrative front, the rules committee authorized a complete review of the rule book, hoping to tidy , up its language and avoid problems like last summer's pine tar affair, when George Bretts illegal bat touched off a huge controversy.

The committee did decide on Friday that a player using excessive pine tar could have his bat tossed out of the game, but that its use could not be the basis to protest a play after the fact.

Roy Eisenhardt, president of tlie Oakiand A s. was named to baseballs Executive Council, succeeding Bostons Haywood Sullivan. Jim Campbell, president of ilrc Detroit Tigers, replaced Eisenhardt on the Player Relations Committee.

Like most of the trades this week, the last-day deals in

volved second-tier players who might fill specific roles on their new teams.

Gross, a left-handed batter who hit .233 with 12 home runs' and 44 runs batted in for the As last season, will probably platoon at third base with holdover Todd Cruz.

- "He also can play first base, and that gives us the flexibility to rest Eddie Murray occasionally." said Hank Peters. Baltimores general manager.

Gross hit a career-high 22 homers in 1977 and enjoyed his best season in 1980, when he batted .281 with 14 homers and 61 RBI.

The price for him was Stoddard, who struggled last season with a 4-3 record, nine saves and an inflated 6.09 earned run average The 6-foot-7 right-hander, who played on North Carolina States national championship

ager Steve Boros, whbse club acquired ace Seattle reliever Bill Caudill before the meetings began, "We think weve accomplishedthat.'L

The Blue Jays, who had just two rookie left-handers on their roster, were determined to correct that situation and went' to Sea 11 le or he Ip.

basketball team in

10--1

uiu

not appear in either the American League playoffs or World Series for the Orioles.

"We needed help in the bullpen." said Oakland Man-

Clark. 27. was 7-10 with a 3.94 ERA for the Manners and moves straight into the Blue Jay starting rotation. In exchange. Seattle obtained Bonnell. who hit .318 with 10 home runs and 54 runs batted in last season and has a career batting average of .275 for seven major league seasons.

"Bonnell will be a /egular outfielder for us along with Gorman Thomas." said Seattle GM Hal Keller. Earlier, the Mariners had obtained Thomas in a trade with Cleveland that sent second baseman Tony Bernazard to the Indians.

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Obituary Column

Parade...

ANGSTER RALEIGH - Gerta Cielkie Angster, 72, of Raleigh, formerly of Greenville, died Thursday. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Brown-Wynne Funeral Home in Raleigh.

Surviving are one son. Guy L. Angster of Raleigh; one brother, Hugo Cielkie of Cape Cod, Mass., and one grandchild The family will recieve friends immediately after the funeral service until 9 p.m.

Campbell

Mrs. Dora Sutton Campbell, 95, died Saturday in Chesapeake General Hospital in Chesapeake, V^a. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev.^ Lawrence P. Houston Jr. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.

Mrs. Campbell, a native of Pitt County, had lived most of her life in Grimesland and was a member of Grimesland Methodist Church.

Surviving are two sons, Lonnie Campbell and Harvey Campbell, both of Virginia Beach, Va.; three daughters, Mrs. Gladys Goldstein of Gladstone, Va.. Mrs. Joyce Shields of Chesapeake and Mrs. Elizabeth Shields of Norfolk. Va.; two sisters. Mrs. Lillie Buck of Norfolk and Mrs Nettie Hodges of Grimesland; a brother. Cleveland Sutton of Grimesland; 15 grandchilren and 30 great-grandchildren,

The family will receive friends Sunday from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Gibbs

NORFOLK. Va. - Mr. John Benjamin Gibbs died Thursday after a brief illness in Norfolk General Hospital Funeral services will be held in Norfolk at Graves Funeral Chapel.

Mr. Gibbs was born and reared in Greenville, but had made his home in Norfolk for the past 40 years. He was a World War II veteran and was employed at the Naval Air Station for many years until his retirement.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs, Jacqulene Barnes, Mrs. Johnetta Barnes and Ms. Beveryly Gibbs, all of Norfolk; five sisters, Mrs. Ruby Langhorne of Chesapeake, Va., and Mrs, Bertha Waters, Mrs, Alice Moore. Ms. Annie Gibbs and Mrs, Savannah Adams, all of Greenville, and nine grandchildren.

Heath

GRIFTON - Miss Sarita Heath of Route 1, Grifton. died in Beaufort Countv Hos

pital Saturday afternoon. She was the daughter of Mrs. Florence Dawson of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville.

Jollv

BETHEL - Mr. William Joseph Jolly Sr. died at his home. 413 Second St.. Bethel, Thursday. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m at Reddick Chapel Baptist Church in Bethel by the Rev. J.L, Farmer. Burial will be in Pinelawn Cemetery in Bethel.

Mr. Jolly was a native of Martin Coiinty and spent his life in the Parmele and Bethel commiinities. He was a member of Reddicks Chapel Baptist Church.

Surviving are his wife. Mrs. Minnie McCray Jolly of the home, a son. William Joseph Jolly Jr. of Washington, DC.; two grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

The familv will receive friends Sunday from T::l0-8:3 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Chapel. At other times, the family will be at the home.

Mewborn

Mr. Frank Mewborn died Wednesday in Mary Immaculate Hospital in Queens. N.Y. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 1 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Chapel. Burial will be in Branch Cemetery near Greenville.

Mr, Mewborn was a native of Pitt County and spent most of his early life in the Haddocks Crossroads communitv.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Andrea T.M. Lewis and Miss Colisa Mewborn, both of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Mrs. Adraine E.M. Gollins of Maryland; a son, Anthony S. Mewborn of Brooklyn; his mother, Mrs. Queenie Patterson of Ayden, andtwograndchidlren.

The family will receive friends Sunday from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Chapel. At other times, the family will be at the home of his mother, 403 Roberta Drive, Ayden.

Sutton

FARMVILLE - Henry H. Sutton died Saturday at his home, 902 S, Walnut St. He was the husband of Mrs. Mamie Sutton. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Joyners Mortuary.

(mtinuedfromA-l)

The weather Saturday was ideal for a parade - sunny with temperatures reaching nearly 70 degrees. Tripp said the large crowd may also be a result of the time of the parade, which was held later this year than in recent years.

Tripp said there were 13 floats, including homemade ones, that participated in the parade. Even though five local high school bancb marched in the parade, Tripp noted that there were no band competitions this year.

"They just played Christmas tunes. Weve had competition in the past and it never works out. It causes more hard feelings than anything. This year, we just let the bands play Christmas music to eliminate a lot of headaches, he said.

Bands who marched in the parade were from West Craven, D.H. Conley, North Pitt, Farmville Central and J.H. Rose high schools. Also participating in the parade were Greenville Mayor Janice Buck. Chief of Police Ted Holmes, the 1983 Tobacco Festival queen, the Ayden Collard queen, clowns, pom-pom girls, the Greenville Boys Choir, the Greenville Fire-Rescue Squad and, bringing up the rear, Santa Claus.

The parade, which began on First Street near the Willis Building, lasted approximately 50 minutes.

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Vines

I Continued from A-l I

securing them with wire."

"For the antlers, I picked out some vines shaped like deer horns and wired them to the head, "she explained.

Mrs. Baker then painted the deer wh^te and strung tiny clear-colored Christmas tree lights up and down his legs and body. As a final touch, she tied a big red ribbon around its neck.

"You can us your imagination and make one standing up, laying down, big or small. Ive gotten so many compliments on the one I made. I just enjoyed every minute of making it." she said.

Flags...

(Continued from A-l)

She said the historical flags included the British Colonial flag (Union Jack), the Grand Union flag which was adopted by the Continental Congress in 1776. the Stars and Stripes adopted as the national flag in 1777, the battle flag of the Confederacy an^ the North Carolina state flag.

She said at some point since the 1974 presentations, the flag of Great Britain was mistakenly ordered as a replacement for the Union Jack, which is similar

appearance. Also, when the Grand Union flag became worn, it was not replaced, she said/The Greenville flag-became weather-worn, she explained, and since there was not another one available, the city began flying the current. 5-star United States flag.

She said the city has decided to fly four of the original flags, replacing the city banner and the battle flag. The current United States flag will fly in lieu of the city banner, and the Stars and Bars, the first government flag of the Confederacy adopted in March 1861. will be flown in the place of the battle flag.

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E-14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday. December 11,1983    *    *    *

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS. Celebrate or entertain all of your family & friends in this 4 bedroom Williamsburg home. Greatroom features a fireplace Gotta be one of the best floor plans around' Owners transferred and hates to leave this great neighborhood but you can be in it by Christmas. $68,900. Listed by Ann Bass

NEW LISTING

WRAP THIS ONE UP-Come with me today and see this custom built Contemporary located on a quiet cul de sac with a natural landscaped yard. Fenced in back yard perfect for that canine Inside, the spacious greatroom has a fireplace for cozy cuddling on those colder days, the master bedroom has a private bath, lavaleers throughout the home add a touch of class. Owner transferred, their loss can be your gain. $56,950. Listed by Ann Bass.

DOLLHOUSE in the country? Yes, with a few minor improvements this three bedroom home could be gorgeous with it's hardwood floors, wallpaper, etc. Qualifies for N C. Housing Finance of 10.35 with payments of approx. $270. Call for more details. Priced to sell $31,900. Listed by Mary Chapin.

NEW LISTING

NVWtV YOU MEASURE IT, U'9 m Ot the UesI buys available. This home is close to the tennis courts & golfcourse. In one of the most prestigious areas of Farmville. Large bedrooms, spacious formal areas, with the charm of an older home, but has the energy effeciency of a newer home. The grounds are heavily landscaped and a screened porch makes a perfect place for dining in warmer months. Detached garage. $80s. Listed by Ann Bass.

NEW LISTING

CONVENIENT to the University this 2 bedroom 1 Vz bath townhouse offers an unfinished basement that is great for storage or recreation room. Fenced in patio area. Qualifies for. N.C, Housing Agency Financing of 10.35%, Fantastic opportunity! $41,000. Listed by Mary Chapin

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NOW OFFERING-Outstanding home with over 4000 square feet of traditional elegance m immaculate condition. Many quality features enchance this gracious 4 bedroom home situated on 2 16 acre wooded lot. Shown by appointment only #594.

143.500-SPERIOR EXECUTIVE HOME-This home is only for tnose w'th champagne taste! Exquisite three story traditional in prestigious Bedford. Formal areas, 4 bedrooms, huge family room with adjoining solariium, finished room over garage and unfinlsh^ThiTd^sTbfyTreT^a few oTlho (edluics, #552;

139.900-BUY YOUR BEST HOME now' This 4 bedroom sho.vplace m Lynndale has to be seen to be appreciated! All formal areas, den with fireplace & walk-m wet bar for entertaining, large xitchen with dining area, and many extras. #407.

109.900-PRESTIGIOUS GRAYLEIGH! ThiS 2400 food 4 bedroom has been ^educed just in time for summer fun See the formal areas for entertaining jmg Ui|p|cio^itchen for that special lady in your life Doubitefgild sl/inah style porches All 'or S109.900 #530.

97.000-FOR THE SELECT FEMALE. Out of the pages of your better decorating magazines comes this two story hotrie in Club Pines Spacnjus greatroom with french doors leading to a deck. Designe' Khcnen featuring custom cabinets and desk for plan-n -g Located on a shaded wooded lot Call formore details. S256

91.500-LOCATED IN A QUIET subdivision, this 3000 square foot npcse 'S ]ust waiting for the right buyer Features 4/5 earocms. 2 full baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, recrea-t'on room, garage, and a large wooded corner lot. Call and let us show It to you #586.

88.900-BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths in Brook Valley, Has all formal areas, family room with fi'epiace. fuHy equipped kitchen with breakTastTtook, Put this on your list of must see-at this price you can't afford to miss it' #588,

85.900-OWNER SAYS SELL! Donl miss yOurchance on tnis beautiful home m Cherry Oaks. Located only a stones throw from pool and tennis courts with acre corner lot It's just .'.aitmg for vou and your family to move in and make d home. #360.

84.000-4 BEDROOM. 2 bath contemporary, 2300 square feet of sneer space Cathedral living room, dining room with skylights,, '-aster bedroom with private deck, and gourmet kitchen, and -Cm'v den are just a few of the extras Call now #556.

81.500-REDUCED! Can you believe 2277 square feet m Club Pmes formal areas, 3 bedrooms, kitchen with lots of built-ins. e.:'a room fpr that special' person, beautifully landscaped ,am-Selle' will finance part of the equity! #524.

8G.GCK) STATELY OLDER HOME near Umveisi-H' VQu'il love .me beauty of this Williarhsburg style home on 5th Street Beautiful hardwood floors, -marble fireplace, modern kitchen with bmaKast -foom full or built ms. 3 bedrooms plus a nursery lor studvi, 2 tul.l baths are lust a few features of this 2500 squaret feet estate Call today for your personal showing #623.

79.900 WESTHAVEN-Beautiful two story home just listed 3 bedroom,s. 2'. baths, all formis family room with fireplace, and even a dog fence^^i wi^|the|i^of the family. Double garage, and mcely iai%$|eyrd,ln*e this one great buy.

79.900-LET'S BE PRACTICAL! Every day you wait to buy a home It IS going cost you more money. Invest now and reap the rewards This home may be perfect tor that decision and is located m Club Pmes close to shopping churches, schools, and yet nestled m the trees on a quiet picturesque street Lots ' space-fo the growijp^Mi(^i^ff|pngby the four bedrooms fioc' pian with eat m4^Krw|rml Amg room, and warm su''-. 'amily room wilwrluKt&Mir

79.750 QUALITY HOME-built by owner with lots of extra atten-:Formal areas, rec room with fireplace and gnll. 4 Dedmoms, 2 baths, and a beautifully landscaped yard Lots of :cm #616.

79.500 MEMORIAL DRIVE. 8 room home ideally Suited for the of-'ice 0' business that is looking for high visibility 110 Feet of 'cao frontage whh approx 20.000 square foot'lot to give you plenty 0* parking area, or room for expansion #624.

79.500 JUST IN TIME for the busy holiday season we offer you th-s two story traditional home with lots of room for Christmas decc'at'ons Featuring all formal areas, family room, cozy kit-

hen and double garage The owner has been transferred and .'.ants to mare this an early Christmas present for you #630.

79.500-WHEELCHAIR READY! That s nght-ttiis 2300 square toot home m Cherry Oaks|ii|s J#idt|o'apcmodate a wheelchair Ert'a wide hails S d(^^|ws\gel)in living, dmmg & kit-:nen areas ScreenedVJr^^i^clifrt #212.

78.500-RUSTIC CEDAR FARM HOUSE-This listing m Tucker Estates offers superior construction Pewter light fixtures and p-riod wai' pace' give the home a Williamsburg flair. Floor plan a reproduction of the owner's Grandma's home and lends a coCh G* nostaiQia Owners transferred and regret having to sen Gall n-ow tor ,ou' private showing. #441.

78.500-HOME FOR A HAPPY FAMILY. This magnificient Cape Coa style heme, has too many extras to list. 4 bedrooms 2 cams garage, screened porch, and a well landscaped yard are ,ust so'n-e of Its qualities Call and let us show you this one. #600.

577.900-WHY WAIT FOR CHRISTMAS? to move your family into this beautiful 1750 square foot Williamsburg home m Tucker Estates Tms home features cheerful greatroom. eat in kitchen, three bedrooms, and 2 baths And there is storage, galore! Now s the time to beat the Christmas rush #629.

77.900-OWNER SAYS SELL!! Moving from Greenville and wants to buy-another m Virginia You will love ihe interior of this spacious 3 bedroom home-and that s not all-the location is ideal Wth swimmi-ng pool less than a block away. Make them an offer Now' #505.

76.900-COUNTRY INFORMALITY in this 3 bedroom split level Spacious family room with fireplace, and large rec room, all modern kitchen to accomodate the most entertaining oriented family Exterior features maintenance free siding and brick, #582.

76.900-PRACTICALLY NEW! Only a year old with energy saving heatpurep. format areas plus den Located m a great neighborhood for walking, riding bikes, swimming, playing tennis Call for showing #423.

74,800-COLONIAL ELEGANCE. This two Story home has everything you could want Four or five bedrooms, all formal areas, family room with fireplace and much more. Best of all it IS located outside the city limits for plantation feeling! #520. 72.900 THIS BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom 2 bath brick home only minutes from Greenville, has 1600 sparkling square feet ready for your viewing It also features all formal areas, ceiling fan. and garage This brick beauty will not last long! #626.

72,500-HORSE LOVERS. This new listing offers 5.6 acres of land (more or less) with 23 stalls, riding rings, pasture, bunk house, and much more. Great trails and roads for riding,..good investment #596.

69.900-CONTEMPORARY built on a wooded hill highlights privacy for your family. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and built ins. and a nice fireplace to keep you warm this winter, #641.

69.900-BEAUTIFUL Williamsburg style home under construe-

'lion, with over 1600 squareTBerTeatures a great room with fireplace, formal dinin|^onikit|heMUh nook, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and lots of stoK|fi.Ma|yextfts|ke a-greenhouse window and large deck^biPt^inwlGllr 69,500-COME HOME TO SOMETHING SPECIAL! This one of a kind 1 story ranch has room galore. Send the kids upstairs to the playroom while you relax in the large greatroom with fireplace downstairs. Lots of attic storage behind the Secret bookcase entrance '. Really unique, #507.

67,950 NEW LlSTING-.Youll be impressed with it's like new appearance, too. Less than two years old with tasteful traditional decor, and hardwood floors in the foyer and dining room. You'll feel good about the spaciousness in the living areas, 3 bedrooms, and 2 baths. Many energy saving features too. Don't-wait. see it soon. #614

67.900-BELVEDERE-This two Story home, nestled among the trees- is the answer to your home buying needs. It features a foyer, formal areas, plus a cozy den. Owners regret having to leave this 3 bedroom charmer. #555.

67.900 SUPER LOCATION & SUPER MORTGAGE on this new listing. An immaculate 3 bedroom IV2 bath brick ranch with beautiful plush carpet, and hardwood floors, living room, dining area, large bright eat-in kitchen, heat pump, screened side porch, and much much more. PLUS FHA low rate assumable loan #611.

66.900 IMAGINE YOUR CHRISTMAS TREE in this beautiful Tri level -heme. And what a gift for your family! It features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formis, family room, and even a workshop for Dad It is situated on a wooded lot on a cul-de-sac and has a 13X19 screened porch. #631.

66,500 LAKE ELLSWORTH-THE PLACE TO LIVE! Take a look at this brick ranch with traditional decor and you will agree with us that It has everything. 3 Bedrooms, 2 full baths, foyer, living room, combination dining-family room, floored attic, and a nice deck There is also new carpet in this home, and parquet floor in kitchen & utility areas. With 1500 square feet it offers just about all you could ask for Let us show you this one sooa-#640,    '

65.900-UNIVERSITY AREA-This 3 bedroom brick ranch offers Jormal living room with fireplace, den & screened in porch. The "well landscaped yard gives the home a real look of class. #598.

65.900-USE YOUR IMAGINATION and turn this quality built 4 bedroom in the University Area into a palace. This 2337 square foot beauty features two sunrooms and a hot tub in the large La&k yard. Call the office for more details, #558.

65.000-LOCATION COUNTS This charming brick ranch is located in Belvedere and features many extras such as; large corner lot, deck, heat pump, living room, dining room, family room, and much more. Call today! #605.

64.900 NEW CONSTRUCTION! Located in a lovely quiet subdivision. this ranch home is well under way, and if you buy now you can pick your own colors, etc. Features Greatroom,with firepiacePS bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen with breakfast area, and a nice deck to relax on. Let us show you this one before it's too late #621.        .    '

64.900 NOT BRAGGING-just a fact ..this new listing has a low interest rate FHA assumable loan...no qualifying and you save closing costs This 3 bedroom V'2 bath brick ranch is located on lovely mature lot in popular Elmhurst. Close to schools and University #611.

63.000-COUNTRY COMFORTS abound in this new offering just minutes from town in a quiet subdivision. It is nestled on acor-ner lot and features a sunny eat in kitchen with bath window, formal areas, cozy den and a spacious walk-in pantry. Owner says sell, so help us out today, #541.

63,000 BELVEDERE-This 3 bedroom doll house is fresh on the market and must be seen today. The spacious yard is great to putter in before you go inside to relax on these pleasant summer evenings. Ypu need to call right now. #597.

62.900-RECIPE FOR HAPPINESS-Take one nice 3 bedroom home, add a den with fireplace and formal areas and you have the makings for years of sweetness for a family. Spacious yard with a split rail fence. #499.

62,700-CQNVENlENT TO THE HOSPITAL. This home has 1600 square feet, chair rail, wainscotting, beamed ceiling in greatroom. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, and low utilities with its heat-pump. Excellent condition, #477.

61.900 REDUCED! Owner say's sell. Lovely home in Camelot originally 65,800 now the price has been slashed to 63,900. Immaculate inside and out. this three bedroom with study which would easily convert to a fourth bedroom, can be yours. Call and make an appointment to see it. #593.

59.900 REDUCED PRICE! 3 bedroom ranch with low assumable loan, all formal areas, den with woodstove, eat in kitchen, closed in attached garage, chain link fence, and dog run. #576.

59.900 MORE HOME FOR THE MONEY-is the only way to describe this immaculate older home with 2440 square feet. Heat pump, screened in porch and many other extras. #608.

59.900-IF YOU WANT QUALITY then we have what you are looking for-an exceptional 3 bedroom home in beautiful Forest Acres You can sit on the screened in porch and view your acre plus private wooded property, #311. Just reduced.

59.900-TEXAS sizes lot surrounds this nice new listing in Winterville School district. Offers 3 bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace and cathedral ceiling, dining room, and a step saving kitchen Quiet neighborhood and nice neighbors add to its other qualities. Take a look, #591.

59,900.SUPER NEW LISTING-Beautiful 2V2 story 3-4 bedroom with IV2 baths. This well maintained home has a completely equipped kitchen, screened porch, and detached garage This floor IS heated & cooled, could be used as a bedroom playroom or office Check it out! #608.

59.900 EASTWOOD-A convenient location This 1571 square foot 3 bedroom brick ranch, with formal areas^ den with fireplace, spacious ^^i^Mc|en,M|in bath with lots of

elbow room" carporj^|:^jr|^p|^s attic. Call for your

59.900-DAYS FRESH! Charming brick rancher, three bedrooms. 2 baths, beautiful groomed. Den with fireplace, half attic is floored and has plenty of storage. Located in bSautiful Lake Ellsworth. Make a point to see this one today! #504.

59.900-UNIVERSITY AREA-Handyman already put new room, aluminum siding, wiring and plumbing. Rents for $525 per month 5/6 bedrooms, 3Vz baths 2400 square feet in all Great investment property. #571.

59,500 CUDDLE BY THE FIRE this winter in this 3 bedroom ranch located in the Winterville school district on a child safe cul-de-sac, Step saving kitchen will be super for Mom, formal areas for entertaining the best of folks. Call and let us show you this nice home. #628.

57,900-COMFORT IS WHAT COUNTS in this cozy 3 bedroom 2 bath ranch in Williamston. Home has all the things you want in-cluding great room with fireplace, large % acre lot, conve

nience to schools, shopping, hospital, and across from counTry' club. AND you can assume the loan! #606.

56.900-EASTWOOD-Located on a wooded lot this 3 bedroom brick ranch offers formal living room, den with fireplace, and lots of charm. Let us show you this new listing. #584.

56.000-ASSUME this VA loan at 11V2% with payments of $481.94 mo. and savings on closing costs, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, with living room with fireplace, den with woodstove, and an energy saving heat pump. Only 6 years old, call for your personal showing. #559.

55.900 CHILD SAFE is the story on this doll. It's located on a cul-de-sac and features 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, and a charming fenced in back yard. Located 10 minutes from the hospital, its what youve been looking for. Why not let us show it to you today. #61|.

55.000 RED 0AK-Chafming 3 bedroom 2 bath home for the person who wants everything to have that just right appearance. Landscaping, fresh exterior painting, and well designed living area that will add to the enjoyment your family will have living here. #625.

55.000-FRUIT COMPOTE-From your mature bearing trees, just one of the many delights to savor when you buy This custom built brick home. Located off Hwy. 11 just minutes from Greenville city limits. A rural setting that you will be proud to call your own. A new listing, so call today. #604.

54.900-ENJQY THIS FLOWER filled yard with room for a city garden. Spacious family room, three bedrooms, den with a fireplace and all located in College Cort. #470.

54.900-SPAClQUS TOWNHOUSE CONDO. Has many extras much as 2 large bedrooms with private baths. Crafted fireplace insert keeps yo snug in the downstairs^greatroom. Louvered shutters at every window. Really special. #436.

54.500-lNTEREST IN-TOWN? Here is a very fine in-town home in excellent location on a heavily wooded lot. If you want privacy, but the convenience of being close to schools, shopping, etc. then this is the house for you. 1 story contemporary with large loft upstairs. Call for more details. #506.

53.900-HURRY! This three bedroorh home in quick seiling College Court wont last long. Nice 1400 square foot home features living room, dining room, bright kitchen with nook, and ceramic bath. Lovely screened porch, woodstove, and a shady fenced yard. ff507.

53.900-WHISPERING PINES CONTEMPORARY-For the small family, 2 bedrooms, i bath, plus a greatroom dining room, and kitchen with appliances. Woodstove in the fireplace to keep you warm next winter. Come out and take a look! #554.

52.900-INVESTMENT PROPERTY-Assume this low interest FHA loan and convert to rental property. Ofcfers garage, fireplace, heatpump, and 3 bedrooms. Located in good area for rental. #547.

52.900 WINDY RIDGE. This holiday dream is no Christmas turkey! It features 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, formal dining, andall of the amenities you've come to associat with wonderful Windy Ridge. #636.

51.900-KICK THE HABJT;The rental habit! Get into a home of your own. This almost n^'w home with assumable loan features 3 bedrooms, 1V2 baths, and an attached garage. Why not check it out? #609.

51.900 CHEER UP-This 3 bedroom IV2 bath home, only 1 year old, has financing available that will brighten your day! This cherry home on a large sunny lot is located on a dead end street, just a few minutes from town. Why not let us show you this new listing before it is too late! #609.

49.900 SELLER WILL PAY POINTS on this beautiful contemporary, located in a peaceful subdivision just outside Greenville. Some of its features include an oversize lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck, ceiling fans, and woodstove. Call today, this one won't last long. #627.

48.900 THIS LOVELY BRICK RANCH in Colonial Heights is priced to sell! Add up the 3 bedrooms-, IV2 baths, large combination Living-Dining-Family room, floored attic, basement, double garage, central air, kitchen appliances, and you have one whole lot of house. Why not take a look? #639.

48.500-CHARMING & DELIGHTFUL! Expect to be envied by your friends when you buy this like new brick ranch in Ayden, Hardwood floors have just been refinished. New paint job inside and out. Plus it has an assumable FHA loan. #516.

48.500-SMART BUY for the smart shopper! This beautiful 4 bedroom brick ranch features microwave, hardwood floors, brick patio, and many other extras. Call today. #517.

47.000-MORE SQUARE FEET-for your money is one of the features of this 4 bedroom ranch with central air. New paint and carpet on Inside, all situated on 2 lots. #595.

45.900-STARTING OUT, Then let us show you our new listing in quiet desirable neighborhood. This 3 bedroom ranch features 1 /2 baths, and a large kitchen, dining area, carport, and is on a lovely wooded lot. Take a peek. #590.

45.900 WRAP UP 3 bedrooms. 1V2 baths, formal living & dining room, eat in kitchen, den. screened porch, enclosed garage with office space or efficiency apt., and you have one nice Christmas gift for your family All this on a well landscaped large corner lot Why,not tie the bow today? #634.

45.000 COUNTRY LIVING can be yours with this charming ranch just 20 minutes from Greenville. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths on over an acre This sweetie is vacant and looking for a new owner Call today for directions. #617.

44.900-SELL THE CAR, you II be able to walk every place from this lovely bungalow in the University area. Living room is large, featuring fireplace with bookshelves on eachside. Large kitchen, sun porch and 2 or 3 bedrooms, New gas furnace and well maintained home, #444.

43.900 LOAN ASSUMPTION! This Cute 3 bedroom 1V2 bath home IS located conveniently to schools, churches, & shopping. Features a fenced yard, and a detached garage workshop area. If you are looking for below market rate, you've just found it. Call and make an appointment to see it today, #642.

43.900-ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES! Here's your chance .to own that 4 bedroom home youve been wanting for under $50 000 This brick ranch offers you very roomy kitchen, 1 bath, plus carport Large corner lot located only a few blocks from

school #545.

42,900 A TANK OF GAS will last longer when you buy this nice 3^; bedroom 1 Vz bath home in Shamrock Terrace. Close to schools Jr-and shopping, it features living room with fireplace to keep you snug and warm. ALL types of financing are available on this^ one. #638.

42,000 TRIM AND TIDY this better than new 3 bedroom, 1V2 bath, 1125 square foot home. Loaded with curb appeal " from Jts brick exterior to its lovely landscaped lot. Features are:

"dead end street, fenced in back yard, central aiTTRafawooff floors, indoor utitity. You really need to see it! #637.

41.900-PRIVACY INCLUDED when you check out this immaculate double wide featuring a deck, woodstove, wet bar and 2 full baths. Its nestled ona 1 acre wooded lot and is just 5 minutes from town, ,#601.

41.000-ALMOST NEW FmHA home minutes from town. Two bedrooms, one bath, heat pump with central air, and beautiful decor, #589.

41.000-CONVENIENT to the University this 2 bedroom 1 Vz bath townhouse offers an unfinished basement that is great for storage or recreation room. Fenced in patio area. #644.

39.900-NEW LISTING in Farmville Area. Features 3 bedrooms, 1 Vz baths, fireplace fenced back yard. All this on a lovely wooded lot in a quiet neighborhood. #603.

39.900-VALUE PACKED! Come see how far a dollar can still stretch ifl this 3 bedroom ranch. A huge 4 car garage 26x30. A comfortable home at a very affordable price, #502!

37.900-THIS HOME needs an owner now! Call for all the details and well work out the financing for you. There's a home for everyone, and this one may be for you. #509.

34.500 Owner moving to Arkansas, so now's the time for you to move into your own place! A 100 X 150 lot with a 3 bedroom, 2 bath Mobile home, with a 500 square foot addition including dining room and den. #615.

33.900 QUIET STREET-This cozy starter home has all the ingredients for a holiday feast. It has central heat and air, three bedrooms, carport, and a detached workshop for Christmas handiwork. #633.

32.500 RETIREMENT SPOT. Couple moving back north to be near the grandchildren, selling 1 acre lot with doublewide, workship, and carport. A good pipce for you to work or relax, and at a price yr>ur family wijl op for. #610.

32,500-IDEAL STARTER or Investment Home! Snug 3 bedroom bungalow with low VAM^tMtjpn jMfi- It's neat as a pin inside and outside is a fW^^opwd In ad fenced in back yard with detached garagAnrcV^lmliwke a look at it! #454.

31.900 DOLL HOUSE in the country? Yes, with a few minor irn-provements this 3 bedroom home could be gorgeous with it's hardwood floors, wallpaper, etc. Qualifies for N.C. Housing Finance of 10.35 with payments of approx. 270. Call for more details #645.

29.900 GREAT STARTER HOME. If you are looking for your first home, or a retirement home, this one is for you. 2 bedrooms, 1 baths, combination family room dining & kitchen, with nice pantry. Ceiling fan for these warm days. Call and let us show you this comfy home in Ayden. #560.

28.000-RENTING YOUR MONEY AWAY? If you want your own place, have we got the place for you! And it comes with a 12x12 workshop to give you a place td spread things out. #564.

25.000-RENTAL PROPERTY, 2 story house in Winterville large enough to be made into duplex. Needs.repairs. #635.

NEW OFFERING

EASTWOOD-One of the few left! This loan can be assumed at 7Vz% with low down payment, and low payments of $279. 1571 square foot home with formal areas, den with fireplace, spacious eat-in kitchen, main bath with lots of elbow room", carport, and a very spacious attic. Offered at $59,900.

NEW CONSTRUCTION

QUALITY CONSTRUCTION is everywhere in this attractive 2 story in Tucker Estates. Randolph Builders will be putting the finishing touches on this traditional design soon, so call now if you want to pick out carpet & colors. If you are looking for sizzle n' style, you'll want to take a look at this distinctive home. $89,900.

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For a Limited Time, We Have 10.35% Financing Available Time Is Wasting! Call us For The Important Details!

756-6666 or 756-5868

2424 s. Charles St.

BASSREALTY

BROKER ON CALL:

Tony Mallard 758-0303





Most items at reduced prices

SAVE 9

Warm blanketcloth sleepwear for misses, juniors

15

99

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Blanketcloth from head to toe. Robes, 1-piece sleepers and 2-piece pajamas in dreamy colors. Easy-care Acrilan acrylic, WearDated by Monsanto. Sizes XS, X, M, L.

Monsanto Full One-Year Warranty

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Footed pajamas

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Sears 40 car battery

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Jensen Speakers

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P18S/75R14

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104.99

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Mounting and rotation included

G-12-11





g.t4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Week's Stock Markets

NEW YORK AP> - New York Slock Exctiange trading for the week selected

issues

Sales

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Market In Brief

NYSE Issues

ConsoWated Trading Fnday.Dec 9

Volume Shares 120.101.350

Issues Traded 2.047

Unchan 440

NYSE Index

95.40 0.05

S&P Comp

165.09 -0.11

Dow Jones Ind

/r 1,260 06 -1.83

MARKET ANAI.VSIS The Dow Jones ;!0 Industrials Average closed Friday at 12(i.(i.,5.IS lower than previous week. l AFEaserphotof    -

Weekly Stocks In Spotlight

Baaxch >    78    21    1 17

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1 nlll'6 1 I nSio.i icntrli' I'rl Iccii ' 'ss.Air impln ' liamSp

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41

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Dawn

24 2.1 INI 1.) .

14'.

f)'.* .

GlWFin

DaMlI

|,.5 I4l92ii.) 12 -

.11

11 . 1 i

Grevh

' 11.1)1 PI,

2 ) mill M .

13

li

Gru 'm .

Deere

1 117 28.54 41

19

,19 . .

GltU.I

DeitaAr

(ill 11744 42 1

4n 1

41 - ,

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72 11 \29tiM !'i

it!' I

:i7 . 1 .

GIlMfl

DelEd

I iiK l)\llHi.+ 14

. 1.1 .

l.i .

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Di.imS

1 : i:l 114.)II2 211'

dlH

211 3 .

Digital

18 r,.'iw 7(1.

68 .

68 . 2

V iHRT

Dinc)

1 2ii IHTMT: 52 .

.5(1 ,

51

ifalbln

Drlepp

84 57 28,8)4 U22

. 211 ,

21 ,

Harind

DnmR,.

2 58 7 l,!712 21

21 .

21 . .

HrpRw 1

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D.iw.ln -

i:ii :il Ulii .')ii ,

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1 llartll

Dre.r

811 Ii27) HII8H 18'.

18 ,

18 , .

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liiiliinl

2 811 1.19894 ,5.1

51 .

51 , 1 ,

1 Heilm .

; DukeP

2 ill 7 88211 25

24

25 . -

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Du(|Ll

2 7 2Hi;5 14 .

14

, 14

i HewPk 1

17 783 12 88 18 4,531 24 i 120I182.')6 24'. 90 9 1279 30'. 911 8 16630 UH1' ,1 8I5.')68 45' 1 64 6 5143 14'.

1 iic'lr, \W'

I'd'nr I'hrmi '

I F.aMAir F.asKiF 1 KK()<i K.alon Kchlin

- F-K -1H291, 7'.

1 311 12 4033 25 ,1a 16 2ll'291 75'

80    7825    1155

1,4 15 '11 2.1

Holiilat

H'llIvS'

1 ilmstk 1 Himwll i lllixpl

- H-H -

742    2'd2'

1 80 14 12641 .19 , :!

76    16    163    18    

n 80    10    360    22

* 88    22    2644    4    .

'II    15    2ol    24'

i:>c    14    2828    21    I

4oa    14    2779    12    

I 44    14    9767    .17

> 18 24 rgl-ll 42 84 16 158:1 52 1    1074    .59'

I 211 24.5488 -IT

:i6o 14 97,i:i ui:i7 .

40 14 1404.1 4(6

18>>. 42' 39"4 57-', 66>. 38'; 165 27'-4

18",-'^ 45'4-1'4 39,-P. 58 -20. 66o.-l'j 39- 'i 1690'--4'2 28 + 12'4+ >2

24"4-1

28'4

180,- :i.

MGMGr

.Macmil

Macv s

MdsFd

MaeiCf

viManvl

MAPCO

12';

12",+

29';

29-",-l-".

52

53';-!';

17".

17,+

37';

37",-

10',

11 +

23',

23",

23',

23",

74

74 -2",

36',

36';-'".

33',

34';-

4'i

4.

53

53',

51".

51".-I.

23",

23',-

7f.

71',- ',

56'.

57'.+

40-,

40.-

43

43',- .

40

40",-

39

39-.-1",

322 92'. 31'; 14'.' 14''. 83'4 26 27'; 14'4

34 -1

92' '-T' 32',~r 14''.-14,-84'j- I, 26';9- '

28'4+

14'+ ' l6\-2'

138 -4'4 25.-l'.

Lehmn 1 99e    601    18-.

Levitzs 72 18 844 45';

LOF 1.20 23 266 41.

Lillv 2 90 10 9666 60

Litton 1806 12 3395 68'.

Lckhds 10 13053 40'.

Loews 1 20 7 70 170 LnStar 1.90    2025    28-4

LlLCo    2 02    5    23463    12-4    dll

LLandn    lb    9    2303    26'.    24-4

LaPac    806    48    2068    29    27.

LuckvS    ' 16    8    x6677    I9'4    18-.

_ M_\| _

44 24 .527 12.

80 13 2898 31'4 80 14 9613 54.

783 18'.

72 11 x2540 39' 37'

4418 II'.

1 13 2078 23

MarMid 1 40 5 192 24 Marriot 44 19 3374 77 MarlM si 34 11 4980 37'4 Masco s 44 19 1830 35 MasevF 2924    5

MavDS 2 9 2275 54\

Mavtg 2 4oa 13 600 53-4 Mcbrl nl 80e 10 x5321 24'

McDnld 1 13 986.3 73 McI)nD 1 42 9 3221 57 4 McGEd 2 17 2046 41'.

McGrH si 08 18 1142 45'4 McKess 2 40 II 947 41 Mead    1    17155    41 '

Melvi! s 1 09 12 7877 34.

Merck 3 15 9774 94';

MerLv s 80 6 29642 34'.

MesaP n 8 9914 15 MldSlt 1 74 6 31491 15'.

MMM    3.30    1.5    7601    85'.

MinPL    2 40    7    269    26''.

Mobil    2 7 22599 28'.

MohkDl 18 2370 15-.

Monsan 40 12 4981 110". 106'

MnlDL    li4    8    302    29-^ 28    29 +

MonP    2 68    7    1894    20".    28".    29::--'T

Morgan    3 70    7    3929    71    69-4    70.- '.

Morton    1 76    14    1317    80',    T6'''.    77-,+ 1

Alotroia I 60 26 7684    143';    137

MlFuel si 44 8 825    27    25

- \-N -NCR. 2 60 13 6637 133'; 130 Mind 1    4471 16',

NabscB 2 28 9 x4')81 42'.

NaiCan ll4.:i7o    28

NalDisI 220 192600    27'.

NalFG    3 44    7    110    37',

NalGvp 1 56 15 xl6.')6 36.

Ml    25    li'i7 32

NSemi s 22:C)3 18'.

NevPw    2 72    12    624    29

NEngEl 3 40 7 xl821 41 New ml 1 23 4.545 55 NTaMP I 92 611114 16

NortkSo 2 80 i:i 605l 64

Nortek (18 12 2420 15',

NoAPhl 1 70 12 x361 76.

Noes!lT 1 38 6 6975 12';

NlndPS l,5(.t 9 7846 14.

No-SlPw    2 96    7    1852    39',

Nonrp    1 80    17    1145    85',

Nwst.Air 80 :17 X3630 48',

Nwl.nd 2 68 79 X22364 u51 Norton 2    23 964    35''.

Nurwsl 1 80    9 757    34 .

N'YN'X wi 6    25751 61

- u-o -

OcciPet 2.50    Xl4977'24 1    24

fJhioEd 1 80    6 8100    13'_.

OklaGE 1.84    8 4185    21.

Olin    1 32    13    1,584    32';

(imark    1 04    17    ,59    25'.    25

ONEUK    2.40    12    410    30    30

OwenC    1 20    18    2904    36',    35'

Owenllll68    2057.U.8',-    36

Oxiord 64    9    98    41g    40'

- p-g-

PPGs 1 28 12:1.503 :!6'. :15' PacGEslOo 7 x2:1785 16'. 15-PacLtg    3 16    7    878    :16',    :14

PacPw    2 16    7    6920 U25';    24'

PcTelwi5 40    24112 55',    .53

PanAm    4,5992 u9    8'

PanhEf 2 :io    10 2511    :15 '    .14

Parsns 114 1611    25'    24'

Penne\ 2 16 11 7426 59 .57 PaPL' 2 40 7 x2762 22'' 22 Pennzol 2 20 11 ,5464 :13 31 PepsiCo 1 62 14 x1.5972 :17', :16'

PerkEl .'gi 25 11 1.54 28 . 27 Pfizer s 1 16 14 22864 .17 PhelpI)    1985 26'.

PhilaEI 2 12 6 10535 14,

PhilMr 2 9(1 10 x16883 72 PhllPel 2 20    8 7679    33

Pilsb\ s    11 860.1    :18

Pioneer 1 24    II 5589    24

130'.-15'' 15''.-4P, 41'.-

26. 25'. 36'. :15'. 30-, 16'; 28', 39'; 52', 16' 61'' 14'; 74 ; 12 14', 38' . 82'.

26 - ' 37'4-1- : 35'- ' 31',+ 16,- 29'.* ' .39-1-1 52',-1' 16'.+ ' 63'4 + P 15',* 76 - ' 12",+ ' 14,+ ' 39'.*I 82',-3.

45', 46 -1'.

(48

33-,

33.

60'..

49'.+ 1

34' ' 33',-P 6I';+ -

13

21',

30'

24',- 43^.+-21''.* ' 30.-1'

311.

35 -37' .*1' 40'.- 1'

:i5.

15';-

34

24'', *

Mutual Funds

NEW YORK (API - Weekly Invesng Companies giving the hxgh, low and last prices for the week with the net change from the previous week s last price All quotations, supplied bv the National Association of Securities Dealers. Inc , reflect net asset values, al which securities

ABT Family: Arbtrg AmBirth Tax.Mng AcornFd n ADV Fund n AfutureFd n AIM Funds ConvYld Greenwav HiYield Sumil AlianTch AlphaFnd AmExpGth n Amer Capilal ; CorpBa Comstock Fd Entei

Enterorise Exchr d n FundOfAm Growth n Harbor Fd HiYldlnv Mun.Bond OTC

Pace Fnd ProvidenlFd A'IbtureFd American Funds: AmBalan AmcapFd Am Mull* BondFd Fundmlnvs GrowthFd IncomeFd

TvCdA'--------

NewEcon NewPerspFd . TaxExpt WshMutlnv Amer Growth AmHeritge n Am Invest n Am Invine n Am med.Asc n Am NatGrth Am .Nallnco Amway Mull Analytic n .Armstng n Axe Houghton Fund B IncomFd StockFd Babsdn Group Gwth n Inco n

CMB Stock n CMB Bond n BLC GlhFd BLC Inco Beac'onGth n BeaconHill n Berger Group: l(K) Fund n 101 Fund n Boston Co

8.36

9    40

10    18 863 3.62 1001 11 03

829 9,16 10 11 8.61 3,59 979 11 00 11 00-

8,29+ 01

9 36- 03

10 11- .02

8 61* .05 3.60- .02

9 79- 16 ,02

29 40 29 26 29 26 4:79    .4 71    4,71-

19.24    19 17    19 21 +

6 64    6,60    6,60-

141.11 140 44 140 44-8,49    8.44    8.44-

9 82 4 58 14.69

9 77 447 14 41

4 47-

14 55*

14 14 14 10 14 11- 05 1 49    1    49    1 49

11.71 11 62 11 62- 03 10 16 10 14 10.14- 03 18 53 18 37 18:37+ (H 16 23 16 10 16 10- 18 14 52 14 36 14;i6* 03 16 .56 16.44 16..53 * 15

CapApr n GvUnn

GvVl SpGlh n BnslFoundtn BruceFd Bull & Bear Gp CapGth n

Colonial Funds: CorpCsh Fund

Grwth Shrs High Yield Income OptionGr

46.91 46 76 46.96 + 04 1388 13.83 1388+ 02 1053 10.45 1048+ 01 7.45 7 42    7.42-    02

6 99 6.96    6 96- 05

16.30 1615 16.15- .19

(Old

OMinc

9.05

9.00

9 00-

01

High

Low

Ijsl Ghg

Tax Mangd

12.50

12,47

1250

ColumbFix n

1222

12.17

12.17-

.02

1205

II96

12.01 +

03

ColumbGrth n

25 72

25.51

25 51-

.10

15 89

15.79

15 85+

06

Comwlth A&B

141

1.41

141

14.06

13.96

14 06+

06

Comwlth C4D

f99

1.97

197-

01

31.96 1 2105

3181

20 85

3181-20 85-

.08

27

Co^^ite Group:

10.18

10.14

1014-

01

16 13

I6U5

16.05-

06

Fund n

10.91

1084

10 84-

04

Tax n

6 39

6.35

6 35-

.05

1352

13.49

13,52+

.05

ConcordFd n

24 82

24.74

24 74-

.02

1289

1263

12 63-

38

ConslellGth n

22,16

2173

21.73-

60

10 48

1047

10 47-

.01

ContMutlnv n

7 13

7.06

7.06-

06

5.52

5.49

5.51-

.01

Copley n CorpCsh

620

6.15

615-

.06

22.09

2188

21 89-

22

49 14

48 06

4891

25.81

25 69

25.69-

20

CounlryCyiGr Criterion Funds:

1668

16 58

16 62+

04

c 1575

1553

15 53-

19

Comrcelnc

9.59

9.52

9.52-

09

689

686

6,86-

03

InvOual X PilolFund

9.67

948

948-

17

14.63

14.52

14 52-

.02

1343

13 17

13 17-

.48

15 63

1554

15.54

03

Sunbl!

14.97

14.82

14 82-

.21

46,57

46.20

46 20-

.21

Dean Witter:

14.99

14.94

14.96 +

09

DvGth n r

927

9 18

9 18-

09

29.62

29.11

2914-

47

DivGth

12 60

12.50

12.50-

.15

1622

1609

16 19+

.25

HiYld

1401

1396

13,97-

.04

10.07

10.05

10 05-

03

IndVahi

12.60

1246

12.46-

.13

17 16

17 13

17 16*

.01

NtlRsc

7.77

7.71

771-

.02

10.26

10.20

10 20-

09

TaxEx

9.72

969

9 69-

.05

20.33

20 17

20.21 *

07

WrldW

10 14

10.10

10.10-

03

592

5.90

5,91 +

02

Delaware Group

30 79

30 47

30 .Ki

29

Oecalurinc

1542

1537

15 37-

04

DelawareFd

19.68

1942

19 42-

29

1091

1089

lo 89*

1)4

DelchesterBd

7 74

7 73

7 74 +

.01

881

871

8 75-

06

TaxFree Pa

6 75

6.74

6 75+

02

15 57

15 45

15 45

,09

Delta Trend

13 95

13.67

13 75-

36

1236

1231

1231-

05

DepstCap n

1082

10.72

10.72-

.07

1225

12 14

12 14-

.06

DepsiTr n

1652

1620

16 20-

43

13 60

13.51

1351-

.08

DirectCap n

1 06

I.W

1.04-

02

1054

10.48

10 48-

06

DC, Div

3 67

23 57

23 57-

.08

ti:12-

11 23-

-11*23=-

-Or

'DodgCoxBaln

27,26

27-12

-27,2H-0fr

Thrift n

9.73

969

Trend n

39 60

39 34

FiduCap n

18.34

18 II

Financial Prog

Bond n

687

6.81

Dynamics n

969

960

FnclTx n

13,98

1392

Industrl n

4.50

447

Income n

9,18

913

WrldTc

8 49

8 39

Fst Investors:

Bond Apprc

13,92

13.86

Discoverv

1785

1768

Growth

13 65

1060

Income

6 49

648

IntlSec

14.87

1464

NatResc

699

6.77

90-10

1449

1437

Option

594

586

Tax Exmpl

870

868

FlexFd n

1209

12.08

44 Wall Eq

700

675

44 Wall St n

1332

1309

FostrMar

6 16

6 15

Fndatn Grwth

5,18

5 15

Founders Group:

Grwth n

10 20

I.16

Drevfus Grp:

A Bonds n CalTx Drevfus Inlcrm Leverage GwthO n NY Tx ^cllncm n 'TaxExmpt n ThirdCnlrv n EagleGth Shs Eaton Vance: EH Balanc'd EH Slock Growlh HiYield Inc Bos Invest

17 58 17.41 17.41- 18

13 12    13 07    13,07-    06

13 41    13 38    13    40-    .01

15 25    15 19    15    20*    .02

12 35    12 33    12    34-    02

16.31 1616 16 16-17 11 86    11 79    11 79-    07

13 09    13 06    13.07-    02

7 77    7.78-    02

10 99    11.00-    02

7 79 11 01 7 08 10 67

'03

1041

.07- 01 10 41- 34

8 71 13 .54 6 85 4 75 8 84 8 45

8 67 1:1 49 6 80 4 72 8,80 8 42

8 67- 03 13,-)4* 04 6 84* ,02 4 72- .05 8 80* .07 8.42- 04

axMgd VS Sped Elierstadt Group Chemical Fd Engv Res Survevor

24 14 23 74 23 74- 44

13 32 13 10 13 31- .02

14 81 14 70 14.70- 12

1141 li:io 11 10 11 03 14 97 1 4 81

11.32* 06 11.lU- 03 1481- .15

969- IH 3937* 12 1811- 27

6 81- 08 9 60- 15

4 47- .04 9 16- 01 8 39- 12

13.86- 06 17.70- .10 10 64+ 04 6 48- 02 14 64- 09 6 77- ,15

14 :17- .11

8 68- (H

12 09 + 02 6 82- 17

13 09- 21 6 16* (II 5 15- .03

Incom n Mutual Sped n Foursq n unavail Frankhn Group: AGE Fund D.NTC

10 83 10 80 3101 30.92

10 16- 07 1416- 12 in.Uv 06 :10 92    21

3.82    3    79

23.38 23 01

3 79- 02 23 01- :18

Equitl n

Tolc

1'

35', ,24' 13''. 70 ,12'. 36'; 22.

22',- ' 32'.* 36.* 27'-!'. :|6'.*1'. 25'i* ' 14',+ '; 70.+ 32',-. '; ;i7'

23' -

nr\

KIP,I" Tlj 'Ji. T2.5T 2.1 KmrsKI 2.10 15 9195 u68' , Kn.crch 1 lie M 17,'gl K'Oirk ..I 04 II 464ii

:,iVkF

.'vK,

jcriLX.

K'hvl

K'.:inP

KxCdii

Kwiio

H5 11 vl 1.55 28

I'll II X.518 37 , 1 2(1 7 ,1877: .18

______-    l    -F    -

Hnldln 2 1.11 289 23 I    fliiuslnl    1    Til    9    2860    11 ,

Hiiulml    2    12    15    409,12    2u

I    HouNl.    I    82    9    6618    45 .

HughTl    84    4,171    20

- I-I -K ind    2    .16    12    X2424    45.

11 Ini 1    15h    IT    ,16,)4    29'

ir Inl wi 1.0,570 u22 .

21

2f'.* '.1

PilnvB s 92 Ki 25;il

:i4'.

:i2" i

:i3'-- .

:9'

.191 r

Pitt.sin fiOl :99ii

If

14'

'i4"T

2.1 1

Pneum 50 11 :t(il 1

27 ,

26

26 , .

ill

19 1

Poland 1 :io 4i:i5

:i4';

:I2';

f.

28'.

29 ,i'.

PorlGE 1 78 0 68:17

14,

14';

14 ,

,1.5 ,

:'i^ I ,

ProeiG s2 40 11 6255

.59',

57

57'. 1

,19 .

41 1*2

PSvCol 1.84 10 6,543

18';

18

18';+

Till

'91.

PSlnd 2 88 4 17926 17';

16';

17'*

,58 *1

PSvE:G 2 64 7.531!

2,5'

24

25'.*

29

29 .

PugetP 1 76 8 ,1529 PulteH s 10 14 2104

14'.

, 13

14'.

1,12';

1 H5',*2 ;

27' 1

1 24

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:17 ,

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8'

1 7 1

8'.* ',

d.22

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1 UiiakI 1 2 '20 20 :1640 ; QuakSO 'Hoa 11 18.19

63'

59

60'^- 2

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17

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16',* ',

20

211 -

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RCA 90 19 IB692

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: 21.51 5C, ' 42Mi 2

'1 '8 2; - 22

nr.) .'.

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114,1

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9,5<i

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61 lb

27 .17.59

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:i 08.8 ...TKi .:i.l 101    819    U24

2 64 6 12205 21 1,1 1.1448 .18 '.

2:! ' 21 -

RLCs

HalsPur

Hamad

Hanco

Hangro

Ravtnn

RcadBl

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RepStl

Ingcrli 2 6 limt.Mi

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IBM

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OMPUllMEJ[N

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NEW YORK AP' - American Siixk

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15 5160 16T'i 155'; 1,56',-5',

IntgE.n

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9 29 2.* ';-M6 5 - ', 16',- 1

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14',

3' 4';

21'. 27 .

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Trico 16 43 2265 U11 ,

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L'SFG 3 84 10 702 59 L'nCarb 3.49 20,5687 67 .

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L'nPat 1 81116 5891 51'.

L'niroyl 214141 17",

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L'SSteel 1    15247    30

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L'niTel 1.84    8 6516    22",

L'nocal 1 7 17428 28';

L'pjohn 2 28 13 1474 57.

L'SLIFE 96 7 1,576 29''.    27

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Wachov 1.56 10 589 46. 44>. 46.+l Wackht 44b 15 120 24",

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WarnrL 1.48    12 10047    29 ".

WshWt 2,48    7 916    20

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WnAirL 9414    4".    4',    4".-    '

WL'nion 1.40 12 X5572 38".    35",    36';-2

WeslgE 1.80 12 12786 u56',    53    54".+

Weyerh 1.30    33 7031    36',    34",    35 -'

Whlrlpl 2    11 5958    49".    48>.    49 - '

WhitUk 1.60    9 18542    22';    dl7',    19 -4 ".

William 1 20 33 2166 28', 27    27';+

WinDx si.56    12 x269    33',    32',    32';+ ',

VImhg 20e    20 x6922    13',    12;    12,- '

Wolwth 1 80    11 1848    38    36",    36'',~1"

Wynns 80    17 145    20',    19".    20

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ZaleCp 1.28    17 492    33    30",    30",-2"

ZenithR 41 5873 u38    34', 34',+ ".

Copyright by The Associated Press 1983.

Sundnc

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37'',

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27,

19';

24'.-39",-!'; 39 +l

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fopyrighl bv The Assnciated Press 1983

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/^.JO The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983

U.S. Confirms Troops To Come Home Monday

By JAMES GERSTENZANG

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. combat troops will be home from Grenada by Monday, 11 days ahead of the Reagan administrations deadline, but about 300 military policemen, logistics s{cialists and technicians will remain on the Caribbean island.

Pentagon officials and a White House source confirmed the move Saturday, after an official at Fort Bragg, N.C., said some of the 1,700 U.S. troops would be returning this week.

We said theyd be out by Christmas. This beats Christmas, said a White House source who spoke on the condition that he not be identified by name. President Reagans spokesman had said that the troops would be home bv Dec. 23.

The last of the combat troops, deployed on the island two days after the start of the U.S.-led invasion that ousted a leftist regime, will leave Grenada on Monday aboard C-141 aircraft for Fort Bra^, the White House source said.

He spoke after Jerry Steelman, a Fort Bragg public affairs specialist, announced on Friday that 1,000 members of the 82nd Airborne Division would return to North Carolina on

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WASHINGTON (AP) -Former President Gerald R. Ford said Saturday the United States should withdraw the Marines from Beirut if leaders of Lebanons warring factions fail to agree on steps to establish a viable government within a reasonabletime.

Ford also said he would tilt toward the views of Martin S. Feldstein, chairman of President Reagans Council of Economic Advisers, who has come under fire from White House officials for his warnings about large federal budget deficits.

In a Cable News Network interview, the former president said he favored some additional revenue in taxes" to help cope with the deficits, as well as a stretch-out" of Reagan's five-year, $1.6 trillion defense program.

Ford also predicted that if Reagan runs for re-election, it'll be a lot closer than some Republican experts are saying."

"Any incumbent normally has more trouble than when he won in the first instance." Ford said. And former Vice President (Walter F.) Mndale, who I think is going to get the nomination, will be a tough candidate."

Lebanese President Amin Gemayel and the country's factional leaders have been meeting in Geneva in an attempt to work out a plan fc.* national reconciliation Ford said he was disappointed that the Geneva talks have not achieved more toward resolving factional differences.

Now the time has come for the Inited States to tell them in Geneva, 'You solve

Monday and that the remaining 700 servicemen would be flown home in small groups by Friday. The 700 were said to have provided support for the combat troops.

The infantry soldiers, those who did the fighting, are coming back, said Steelman. Those who are left will be performing civil duties. Theyll include military police, signal corps units, and workers in different types of civilian projects.

Get Lebanon

your problem. If you dont get going and come up with a viable government in a reasonable time, were going to withdraw our U S. Marines. It's just that hard-nosed, he said.

Ford added: 1 do not believe it's in our national interest at this lime to withdraw our forces from Lebanon. But I do believe we have to lay dovJn some kind of reasonable deadline for action ... in the establishment of a government in Lebanon and some overall progress in the negotiations for a broader peace in the Middle East.

On economic issues. Ford said he was "sympathetic to the concerns expressed by Feldstein.

'1 happen to biev the deficits in the out years are serious and could undercut our economic progress, our economic stability, the sustainability of the progress we're making at the present time," he said.

Asked whether Feldstein deserved to be fired for publicly disagreeing with Reagan's economic strategy. Ford replied: "1 tilt toward the views of Dr. Feldstein. but whether he should stay on, that's a judgment only President Reagan can make."

Ford said that while he supports Reagan's push for the MX missile, B-1 bomber and other major new weapon systems, he would like to see the administration's overall five-year defense program stretched out for an extra vear.

"A sufficient residual element will remain in the country to provide support and augment the security elements of the Caribbean peacekeeping force, the White House source said. They will be called the U.S. Military Support Element Grenada, and will be commanded by Lt. Col. Arthur Graves, a military police officer from Fort Bragg.

Paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division were flown to Grenada on Oct. .26, one day after Army Rangers

and Marines began the invasion.

The tixxqis returning home this week are from the second battalion. 505th airborne infantry. Although they arrived after the invading troops, they were said to have taken part in the initial phases of the Grenadan operation.

Jhe White House source said that Reagan plans to inform our Caribbean friends of our plans, to reassure them that along with the Caribbean peacekeepers

there will be sufficient forces to protect the islands security. An international force is being assembled to serve as a peacekeeping unit on Grenada.

We will be part of this force, which will keep law and order, and we will assist that force while the Grenadan police force is being recruited and trained, the source said, adding that establishing the local force will take.time.

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TV-12

Th# Daily rtaflaclor, Gr^nalll, N.C. Sunday. Dacambaf 11.19S3

Saturday Evening Continued

(Continued From Page 11)

Diane Keaton, The collapse of an upper middle-class couples marriage and its effect on their four daughters is chronicled. R (2hrs.,5min.)

(NICK) The Curioos Caae Of Santa Claus James Coco in the title role seeks a psychiatrist's help because he's depressed by the commercialization of Christmas.

9:50 (NICK) At Tlie Met Metropolitan Cats The fact and fancy of cats as animats and artifacts are revealed in this amusing and whimsical look at one of mankind s most mysterious companions.

10:000 Crisis Update: Agony Of Hunger

O O (B Perry Comos Christmas In New York Michele Lee joins Como for a Yuletide celebration in the Big Apple, g (1 hr.)

NW8

o o The YeUow Rom Whits involvement in Jebs shooting is questioned and Juliette tries to make peace with her recovering father. (1 hr.)

SI Kenneth Copeland (SPN) Susan Noon Proles (k)) Kenny Loggins Singer ; songwriter Kenny Loggins performs many of his greatest hits -

    including "Whenever 1 Call

You Friend and "Keep The Fire in this concert taped at ' the Santa Barbara County Bowl. (1 hr.)

(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents

/(.(> trt    ' Wsr.

AV.*V 9 VUMa/vaa

(NICK) The Making Of A Song

Trombonist and composer Bob Brookmeyer is commissioned to create a pure jazz orchestration of the Rodgers and Hart ballad . "My Funny Valentine.

10:30 Page Five 10:50 (NICK) Artist And Athlete; The Pursuit Of Perfection The parallels of artistic and athletic endeavor are explored against the backdrop of the Lake Placid Winter Olympics in 1980, (1 hr., lOmin.)

11:00 O Children In Crisis OOOOOOXBNews Odd Couple Q) Holiday Special .

S Twilight Zone (SPN) Money, Money, Money (HBO) Movie Table For Five (1983) John Voight, Richard Crenna A man who was

divorced five years earlier returns to his now remarried wife to Uke a more active role in raising his children. PG (1 hr., 59 min.)

(l^) Night Flight An inside look at the new movie The Man - Who Loved Women, starring Burt Reynolds and Julie Andrews. (4 hrs.)

11:05 (SHOW) Best Of Biiarre 28 11:1500 ABC News 11:20 News 11:300 John Ankerberg O Solid Gold O Sports Saturday Movie Hilb Of Home (1948) Edmund Gwenn, IXmald Crisp. A Scottish father is persuaded by a physician that hb son would do well to study medicine. (2 hrs.)

o O College Basketball

Memphb SUte at UCLA (2 hrs.) o Donee Fever

O Movie The FBI Vs. Alvin Karpus, Public Eneim Number One (1974) KoDeit'Toxworth, Eileen Heckart. One of Ameri- cas most wanted criminab of the 1930s b pursued. (2 hrs.)

0 Movie The Big Country (1958) Gregory Peck, Charlton Heston. An Easterner becomes embroiled in a bitter feud between two Texas ranchers over water rights. (3 hrs., 30 min)

0 Twilight Zone (SPN) Personal Computer

itmnan    rnnfocsinnc    Qf

A Pop Performer (1975) Robin Askwith, Anthony Booth. A rck 'n' roll star finds plenty of ^.romantic- action while onjtour. (1 hr, 30 min.) (B5PN)SportsCenter 11:450 Wrestling 11:50 Ni^t Tracks 12:00 O Bi^ The Horison QStar Search 0 JimBakker (SPN) Looking East (ESPN) Horse Racing Live coverage of the Champion Of Champions Quarterhorse race (from Los Alamitos, Calif.) (1 hr.)

12:05 Night'lYacfcs 12:300 Soul Train 12:450 Movie The Terminal Man (1974) George Segal, Joan Hackett. (1 hr., 55 min.)

1:000 Celebrity Crusade For Life Joseph Campanella hosb thb fund-rabing special for hungry and underprivileged children around the world. Included

arrvappeartnc ^ Johnay+ Mathb, Tony Bennett, Steve AUen and Martin Landau. (1 hr.) QSonlTrain 0PTL Gab (Spanish)

(SPN) Joe Barton Jass (SHOW) An Andience With Mel Brooks Mel Brooks welcomes guests Anne Bancroft, Ronny Graham and Jonathan Pryce in thb mixture of music, drama and comedy. (1 hr.)

(ESPN) College Basketball Marquette vs. Syracuse (2 hrs.)

1:05 Night Tracks 1:10 (HBO) Movie Rollover (1981) Jane Fonda, Kris Kris-tofferson. (2 hrs.)

1:30 Vietnam: A Tekvyoo History

OMaskMagaiiiie O Christopher Closenp News 2:00 0700 Club OAUInTheFamUy ONews 0JtmBakker

(SPN) Movie Scarlet Street (1945) Edward G. Robinson, Joan Bennett. (2 hrs., 10 min.) (SHOW) Movie Just Before Dawn (1981) George Kennedy, Chrb Lemmon. (1 hr., 30 min.) 2:05 Night Tracks

2:300 News 2:40 ONews 3:000 Heritage Singers 0RexHnmbard

(^j^^^tnSlht An inside look at the new movie "The Man Who Loved Women, starring Burt Reynolds and Julie Andrews. (R)

3:05 Night Tracks 3:15 (HBO) Movie Four rnends (1981) Craig Wasson, Jodi Thelen. (1 hr., 55 min.) S:SOOHi,Doug Movie How The West Was Won (1963) James Stewart, John Wayne.

O All In The Family 0 Phil Arms

(SHOW) Movie Shoot The Moon (1982) Albert Finney, Diane Keaton. (2 hrs., 5 min.) (ESPN) PGA Golf Chrysler Team Invitational Third round (from Boca Raton, Fla.) (R) i 4:00 O Westbrook Hospital OQNews 0D. James Kennedy 4:05 Night Tracks 4:10 (SPN) Movie Of Human Bondage (1934) Bette Davb, Leslie Howard.

4:300 Ron Bagley

Monday-Friday Daytime Cont

(Continued From Page 9)

Pink Panther O The Brady Bunch 0BJ/Lobo

0 Sign Of The Times (Wed) (SPN) Paul Ryan (SHOW) Mark Twain Theatre (Mon)

(SHOW) Movie (Wed) A Christmas CaroT (1951)

(SHOW) Dot And SanU Claus (Fri)

(ESPN) CoUege BasketbaU Preview (Mon) SporbWoman (Wed) College Basketball (Thu) Top Rank Boxing (R) (Fri)h>(> Dona led

Walti1 l.antz ircator of the popular Woody Woodpecker car-toon> has donated the 31,000 fee he recei\ed. lor his guest ap-pearame on Too Close For ( omtoit to the llraille Institute in menioiA of his father, who was a blind muMcian The segment entitUnl F There a Doctor in the .House will be seen when the vhow returns to the home screen in earlv spring

(HBO) Animal Talk (Moo) Frag-gle Rock (Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Thu) Christmas Mountain (1981)

(NKK) The Third Eye (Moo. Wd, Fri) Against The Odds (Tue, Thu)

4:350 The Brady Bonch 5:000 Tic Tac Doogh O Sanford And Soo LoveBoat OPeofdes Court QGomerPyle O Andy Griffith 0 Three's Company 0100 Huntley Street 0 Mister Rofen(R)

(SPN) Life Of Riley (Moo) Telephone Auction (Tue, Thu) Insight (Wed) Looking East (Fri)

(ESPN) CoUege Basketball (Moo) Instructional Series (Wed) (HBO) Animal Talk (Wed)

(NICK) The Tomorrow People (USA)HotSpoto 5:05 Leave It To Beaver 5:15 (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Wed)

5:300 Lets Make A Deal O Sanford And Soo Q Andy Griffith ONews

OWKRPInCindnnaU

OM*A*S*H

O Peoples Courts 0 3-M Contact

(SPN) Money, Money, Money (Moo) Investors Action Line (Wed)

(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Love At First Bite (1979)(Tue) "Dont Cry, Its Only Thunder (1982) (SHOW) Bonnie Scotland (Iho) (rao) Hw Snowman (Mon) Sugar Rays All-Stars (Tue) Fraggle Rock (Fri)

(NICK) Livewire 5:35 Beverly HillbUliea 5:45 (ESPN) Instmctiooal Series (Wed)Fearless avion

Waylon Jennings was surprised when he arrived at his hotel in Belfast, during his European tour, to discover barbed wire fences around the hotel and guard-escorts for guests checking in' Later Waylon s staff admitted that they knew he was staying in the most frequently bombed-sight in Belfast - but they were afraid to tell him. He only laughed when they broke him the news When Jennings was asked what his reaction was to the tour he said "I can't wait to go back! "

MENS WEAR

an Okat Sfizaiat Ckximai. <Swati

The Cox Moore lambswool Vee Neck pullover sweater.. .a practical sweater that is uncommonly classic. This sweater is meticulously crafted in England from the fine lambswool yarn and in an unbelievable group of colors...plum, yellow, red, navy, natural, white, black, charcoal, etc. And the value would make you want to buy an additional two or three. $50.At All Of Our Fine Stores

Carolina East Mall and Tarrytown Mall Stores Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday thru Friday During December

a

MENS WEAR

Downtown Greenville Carolina East Mall Tarrytown Mall - Rocky Mount





FLASH GORDON

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by Dati Barry

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70    TOCOUJBCr

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HAVE TAKEN VOUR 5IP I ACT ON My 0\NN !





Nylon Tot Bog

Bag with ad-^ iustabie strop, 4 oxloflor pockets.

12(1-12)





Hats Are Back As Topping For Spring Fashibn Parade

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C Sunday. December 11.1983    C*3

BXiAYPALLEY IPl Senior Editor : NEW YORK (UPI) -"I've been making hats for t)ver 25 years and this is the best season I've ever had," says Frank Olive, a self-styled "senior milliner."

Says Patricia Underwood, the British-born milliner who migrated to New York. "The stores report hats doing quite well. I've already designed my spring line, but were still filling fall and winter orders."

Marsha Akins, who started Makins "in my kitchen on an unemployment check," says the boater is the most successful item for the new

season.

These three milliners were the stars whose hats most frequently were shown with

the^pring-'simiTnerreachF~

to-wear collections from New York desiger-manufacturers.

It's news that ready-to-wear has resumed showing completed outfits, ac-cessorizecF with hats that went into eclipse with the age of the sorcalled "flower children" of the 1960s,

About the lacd fashion influential in the hat department Was Jacqueline Kennedy lOnassis). whose famous Inauguration Day pillbox from Ralston ultimately was copied for almost every female head in the land.

Today, you don't see the pillbox. You see berets and stiff-brimmed straws with wide, wide face-framing brims. Frank Oliva's biggesj, among this latter group measures 21 inches, edge to

".Not for your subway rider," Olive conceded. "But these portrait brims provide the proper balance with the long, lean silhouette. The berets, go well with the sweater look that pervades the new ready-to-wear.

"We have a whole new customer out there." said the milliner. "Shes the one who has discovered glamour again. Hers is a different ifestyle. She travels extensively, a hat no longer is a matter of etiquette but of her own flight of fancy. She is , in a way flirting with

herself."

"In the 1930s and 1940s, women had images to follow, the glamourous stars of Hollywood. People copied Joan Crawford hats and shoes. I remember my mother always had a picture of Kay Francis on her dressing table. My mother was a beautiful blonde, and no way ever was going to look like Kay Francis, who was brunette. But there was that image."

Patricia Underwood, a millinery designer for 11 years and winner of the Coly award, likes the casual southwester look, copied from sailors storm wear. It has a deep crown, sloping to the back to protect the neck.

"It's enjoyable to see how to put a hat together with an ^tfit."^sid.

"I wish we could get Nancy Reagan wearing more hats. Maybe as we go into winter we will see her wearing them as it gets chilly around those helicopter pads."

Marsha Akins designs hats for men and women and won a Coty award in 1977 for "injecting excitement into the long-dormant category of mens headwear."

Her designs are. in effect, "What's his is hers or vice versa." since she finds women buying her menswear styles and the men buying the women's.

"Hats must be fun," said the designer: "Makins is known for color; for our spring-summer collection we will have about 135 colors.

Her womens hat shapes embrace the beret, the oversized fedora, or the oversized copy of the men's porkpie. For men, there are wide brims with low crowns and wide, contrast grosgrain trims.' reminiscent of the gangster" hats of the 1930s.

tary, thou^, and I wasnt getting anywhere."

She started Makins in her one room apartment, a fourth-floor walkup. An unemployment check was her capital. The year was 1975.

At first, she blocked hats on a jiffy steamer in her kitchen. After baking the hats in the oven, she stitched them up on her sewing machine and added the trimming.

Today, Makins has its own factory, some 20 employes, and ships to retailers in all states, Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, Canada, Europe and Japan. The hats still are hand-crafted.

*T remember when I first started hats, she recalled with a laugh. "I would make a roTffiTofttie^res with my samples in a plastic shoppingBest Rule For Gift-Giving: Use Common SenseBy Abigail Van Buren

* 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

told, Sorry, sale merchandise is not returnable.

Dont give anyone a pet unless yoiire absolutely sure its wanted and will be properly cared for. And if you want to delight someone who considers his pet a member of the family, include a tin of cat or dog food for the pet.

Dont give wine or liquor unless youre sure the recipients imbibe. Candy, nuts and fruitcake make wonderful gifts for those who arent counting calories, but please have compassion for those who are, and lead them not into temptation.

Resist giving toddlers stuffed animals and dolls that are bigger than they are. And parents will thank you for not sending their children horns, drums, sirens or whistles. If you give a child a game or book, be sure its in the appropriate age range.

Instead of giving someone a gift with permission to exchange it if its not what you want, save yourself (and him) much time and effort and give him a gift certificate in the first place.

Holiday time eqn be very depressing for people who are alone, so'Jf you know someone who might be alone and lonely, give him (or her) the best gift of allan invitation to spend the holidays with you and your family. Loneliness is the ultimate poverty. Love, ABBY

GRANTS

WASHINGTON i.AP) -The Opera-Musical Theater Program of the National Endowment for the Arts recently announced a total of $5 million in grants.

The grants will be used to assist proessional opera and music theater companies and to support regional louring and services to the field in the current performance season

The program also announced 37 grants coming to S.580.205 which are to encourage the production of new musical theater in this countrv.

Ninas

Antiques

DEAR ABBY: Last year you devoted an entire column on what to giveand not to givefor Christmas. It was wonderful. Please give it another run.

SENIOR CITIZEN IN SAN DIEGO

DEAR SENIOR CITIZEN:* Many others have requested a rerun, and here it is.

DEAR ABBY; Our newspaper rarely publishes an address for those who want to write to you with a problem. Today I saw a box number where one can obtain your booklet, low to Have a Lovely Wedding. I have just passed my 83rd birthday and have already had three lovely weddings, which were sufficient, thank you.

I remain very truly yours,

. WAITING TO HEAR

Once 1 was busted in Bergdorfs. They thought I was a shoplifter.Cooking Is Fun

Ms. Akins, a New Y'orker by birth, studied economics and political science at the University of Illinois, and took fashion courses at New Yorks Fashion Institute of Technology.

"I had always been interested in design and made all my own clothes," she said. "1 was working as a secre

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor BAKED HOMINY --An easy-to-make American regional dish.

2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons unbleached all-purpose flour ' 2 cups milk >2 teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper 16-ounce can whole golden hominy, drained 16-ounce can whole white* hominy, drained ,

1 cup grated (medium fine) Cheddar cheese

2 slices bread, crumbed and mixed with 1 tablespoon melted butter

Make a white sauce of butter, flour, milk, salt, and pepper; add golden and white hominy. Turn half the mixture into a buttered 1> .-quart oblong baking dish (10-by 6-by b'l-inches). Sprinkle with cheese. Layer with remaining hominy mixture. Top with bread crumbs. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven until bubbling hot and crumbs are golden color - 20 to 30 minutes. Makes 6 servings.

DEAR READERS: Can you believe its time to prepare for the holidays again? Well, it is, so do yourselves a favor and do your Christmas shopping early.

If youre wondering what to give Aunt Jennie or Grandpa, who dont get out much, let me tell you what not to give them:

No dusting powder, after-shave or cologne. (They probably have several unopened boxes gathering dust on their closet shelves.)

Grandpa doesnt need another necktie, and Aunt Bertha doesnt really want any more brooches, necklaces or bracelets.

With the price of groceries so high, folks who live alone on a fixed income probably would be delighted to receive a ba^et of goodies. Include small cans of salmon, chicken, ham, tuna, vegetables, fruit, instant coffee, tea bags, crackers, cookies and instant soup mixes.

Older people who live in confined quarters do not need more things that are ornamental only. Dont send music boxes, statuettes or other bric-a-brac.

A truly thoughtful gift: postcards and some lined stationery with envelopes and a generous supply of postage stamps. (Enclose some felt-tip pens, too.)

The homebound will appreciate a box of greeting cards for all occasions so that they too can send birthday, anniversary, graduation, get-well and condolence cards to others. (Be a sport! Stamp some envelopes.)    '

Dont give anyone a gift of clothing unless youre absolutely sure the size is right. That goes for the color and style, too.

If youre tempted to pass along a scarf, purse, walletor some useless little doodad you received three Christmases agoplease dont; the recipient will probably find it just as useless as you did. (Besides, you might get it back the year after next.)

If someone on your gift list is living on a pension, a check for any amount would be muoh more appreciated than a frivolous little trinket. Or give someone whos counting pennies a years subscription to a newspaper or magazine you know he or she will enjoy.

If you buy a gift on sale, be sure its appropriate, since if the recipient tries to take it back he will be

DEAR WAITING: Write to P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. For a personal reply, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.

(If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.)

Open Every Weekend Fri., Sat. &

Sun., 1 Til 5 '" 3 Dealers Displaying A Variety Of Furniture, Glass, Crafts & Candles Farmville Hwy. 264 '/2 Mile Beyond Lake Ellsworth

jS Unique Experience R I    Browsing in 100    |||

^    Year Old House    jfi

STAINED GLASS

ROCHESTER, N Y lAP) - Warm blood of goat, powdered sulphur, and leaves of nightshade plant are among the ingredients found in 15 medieval recipes for making colors for stained glass.

The recipes are contained in an 11th century manuscript owned by Sibley Music Library at the University of Rochester's Eastman School of Music.

Galled the 'Rochester Codex," the manuscript is more important to the library because it also contains a treatise on "the science of music" which was written by a benedictine monk.

Where Does Your Pet Go When You Go On Christmas Holiday?

Reserve A Place At

HELENS GROOMING WORLD & PET MOTEL 758-6333

Pets Exercised Daily* Grooming All Breeds

Remember Your Pet At Christmas New Shipment Of Sweaters,

Eastern

Electrolysis

133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE 6 PHONE 756-4034, GREENVILLE. NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST

The Christmas Booths

Doris and Marlene

MADAME ALEXANDER & EFFANBEE DOLLS. ETC., COUNTRY CRAFTS AND ANTIQUES. HAND CRAFTED WOOD ITEMS. LAMP DESKS & SEWING BASKETS. GLASSWARE., WATCHES. GIFTS. CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS. TOYS & AN UPRIGHT PIANO

Open Wed. Thru Sun.. 8 AM to 6 PM

POOR MANS FLEA MARKET

Highuay264 East. 8 miles from Greenville 752 1400

Isnt it wonderful!

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m.

Until 10 p.m -Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

Maiikifomis havinga simply sensational

SALE!

What a way to shape tip .    . and save at the same time. Many

of your favorite styles will be on sale for a limited time only. So come in today and buy the Maidenform thats right for you.

toucan see why Im a IVhidenform woman.

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m.^ntil 10 p.m.--Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

Ciiruhita east mall ^'qreenvilk'

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m.

Until 10 p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

Dermablend Cover System for Concealment of Skin Imperfections. A Natural Camouflage for:

acne marks

birthmarks

scars and burns

vitiligo

varicose veins

dark eye circles

moles

blotches

age spots

bruises

freckles

broken capillaries

post-surgery discolorations

There's never been anything quite like Dermablend . A tiny bit covers and conceals, looks and feels like natural skin, is so light you won't know you're wearing it. Developed with the aid of dermatologists, Dermablend Cover Creme is Waterproof, greaseless, fragrace free, long lasting and easy to apply. Pale ivory to brown/black shades match most every skin tone Setting Powder ''fixes'' the creme so it won't rub off on clothing. Dermablend Cleanser is essential for those who use the Cover Creme. Since the Cover Creme was made to last it needs the highly effective ingredients in Dermablend Cleanser for removal, and m avoid 'unnecessary tugging of the skin in cleansing. So, whether you have small skin problems or large ones, try Dermablend today and enjoy the results.

[/j77/777///t^077/

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. UntinO^pj^^

ft    -t

mm





B-16 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday, December 11,1983selling securities, pi can trade throug] and saw up to 60% or more* on commissions.

Lower commission rates. Trades with Wachovia Brokerage Service can save you up to 60% or more compared to trades with a full-service broker, depending on the price and number of shares traded.

Easy to open, easy to trade. A Wachovia Personal Banker can open your account for you at any of over 200 Wachovia offices across North Carolina. Once your account is open, making trades is easy. Just call our toll-free number and tell one of our broker service agents what you want, and its done.

Complete financial service. Excess cash in your Wachovia brokerage account can be transferred automatically to your Wachovia Cash Investment Account or other deposit accounts. This convenient arrangement means dividends, interest and proceeds from sales go where they can keep working for you, and where you can have access

to your funds whenever you want them. Securities purchases can also be paid automatically from these accounts.

Free safekeeping. Wachovia offers free safekeeping (in street name) of your securities. When you transfer or deposit your securities with Wachovia, they are safe, ready to trade immediately, and youll receive a statement showing their current market value every month.

Open an account today. It only takes a few minutes with your Personal Banker, it costs you nothing until you trade, and youll begin enjoying our free safekeeping service right away. If you follow your own advice, theres no better vry to trade.WachoviaBank&Trust

* Based on average figures for equity trades compiled by an August 1983 telephone survey of leading brokerage firms operating in North Carolina.





19.97.

   ^    Ea.    Our    26.97

MacGregor 2-pc. Fashion Jogging Suits

Zip-front jacket with 2 pockets and matching pants with rear pocket. Styles, colors may vary.

18.97

Sale Price

Childrens Colorful Snoozle** Sleeping Bags

Make sleeptime a fun time with warm and cozy slumber bags. Choose Care Bears* or Herself The Elf.*

MCMIXXII AmericQn Greeting Corp

Our Reg. 139.97 Deluxe Designer Exercise Bike

Includes speedometer/odo-meter, adjustable seat. 20" wheel.

Our Reg. 18.97 Pr. Childrens Roller Skates

Sturdy vinyl shoe skates with popular character designs.

- Our Reg. 6.97 21-piece Ratchet Socket Set

and -inch drive socket set Reversible ratchet. Metal case.

26V.X17X

25!'.x

Our Reg. Prices All Hand Tools In Stock

Precision-crafted tools for use in home, workshop, garage.

Sale Price Professional Quality Cabinet

Mechanics 3-drawer roller cabinet* with 6-drawer tool chest.* *

-    ^ Our Reg. 6.88

Protective Fender Cover

Acid- and grease-resistant cover with ridged area for tools.

32(1-12)





i r

$3 off any

Nike shoe in stock

Save 50%

Sale 9.99    >

100-page photo album

Orig. $20. Post bound, refiilable photo album with 100% magnetic pages. Holds all popular size photos. Available in several colors.

On sale through Saturday, December 17.

\.

Sale 14.99

Ladies Track and Courf warm-up suits

Orlg. 24.99.100% acrylic triple knit warm-up combines good looks with the built-in comfort youd expect from a famous name. Zip front jackets, cuffed pants with sewn-in crease. Ladies sizes.

Save 50% on

Puiiman

case

Orig. 39.95. Sale 19.99

Make a good looking getaway with this heayy-dutv nylon oullman with

duty nylon pullman wit vinyl trim. Wheels and

pull strap make for easygoing.Good Soorts SaleOn your mark, get set for big savings^n Track & Court' Plus Nike on sale..-C'i

w

Sale 6.99 to 12.99

Track & Court' athletic apparel.

Warm up to Track and Court'* sweat-wear. Running right along with today's styles. Cotton/acrylic, polyester/cotton and other easy-care fabric biends. In mens and women's sizes.

Reg. Sale

Men's hooded

pullover sweatshirt.......12.99    9.99

Men's sweatpant.......... 9.99    6.99

Women's hooded

sweatshirt................13.99    10.99

Men's hooded

zip-front sweatshirt.......15.99    12.99

Sporting savings on many other great styles of Track and Court'* for men and women, Reg. 8.99 Sale 6.99

'/

/Save 58% onNike velour warm-upsorig.'seo. Sale 24.99

Good looking, poly-cotton velour warm-ups featuring pullover tops with neck zipper, yoke and stripe trims. Nikd knows the comfort and good looks athletic men and women want... now at great savings.

Similar to illustration.

U

THE CHRISTMAS PLACE





9(1-12)





House Hunting? Bag this bargain!

I ^

New Listing in Stokes

Comfortable country house features two or three bedrooms, kitchen, living room, dining room. Aluminum siding.

Call For Details

w.g. blount & associates

756-3000

OPEN HOUSE

RED OAK SQUARE TOWNHOMES

Saturday, Dec. 10; Sunday Dec. 11 l-5p.m.

10.35% Shared

APR " Equity Financing

located on 264 W. behind Red Oak Shoppng CenFcT

We Invite You To Compare!

w.g. blount & assoc.

756-3000

mioBeUti'ilkirnia lUsltg

Office: 746-2166 Were Open Today From 1 To 5

10.35%

N.C. Housing Financing Mortgage Avaiiabie on Most of the Homes We Have Listed.

THEREAL

ESTATE

CORNER

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. December 11,1983 -11

RENT WiTH OPTiON TO BUY. Beautiful 4 bedroom brick colonial on the Ayden Golf Course. Features 2 full baths, formal living room, dining room, den with fireplace, garage, storage building and large lot. Owner has moved so you can move in now. $67,500.

YOU MUST SEE this unique brick home in Grifton. This home on a tree studded hill has 1900 sq. ft. of living area. 2 bedrooms, large living room with fireplace, den with fireplace, all ceramic kitchen, basement, screened porch with bar-b-que grill, and many extras. See this one today in beautiful Forrest Acres. $56,500.

NORTH HILLS AYDEN. Ideally located in a nice quiet neighborhood, this charming brick home features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with fireplace and dining area, kitchen with built-ins, carport and storage area. $49,000.

ASSUMABLE VA LOAN, on this brick home in Ayden. This home is an excellent buy and features 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, den with wood burning stove, and formal area. Large back yard with plenty of trees. $43,500.

CONVENIENT TO EVERYTHING. Located in a great location this home is where, the youngsters can walk to school and just a healthy walk away to the shopping center. Formal living room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, kitchen with dining area, and garage. See this one today. $45,000.

FmHA ASSUMPTION for qualified buyer. Brick ranch features 3 bedrooms, 1 Vz baths, large eat-in kitchen, attached garage, yard with lots of young fruit trees. $41,500.

IN THE COUNTRY but not too far. This siding home is perfect for the beginner and priced just right. 2 bedrooms, central heat, good size kitchen, den with wood burning stove, and workshop in back. About 4 miles east of Ayden. $29,900.

KENNEDY ESTATES. Ayden. This 3 bedroom brick ranch is priced right to sell. Attached garage, 1V2 baths, eat-in kitchen, living room, electric baseboard heat and nice yard. $34,000.

DUPLEX. Good location. Bath, living room, 2 bedrooms, and kitchen in each apartment. $35,000.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING downtown Ayden. 12,800 Square feet, 2 story, corner lot. $25,000.

$4,000. Lot on Edge road in Ayden, with trees, city water, sewage, police, fire protction, zoned residential.

On Call Loulaa H. Motatty QRI NonONIce Hours 746-3472

OPEN HOUSE TODAY

2 - 5 P.M.

Tucker Drive, Section II

Cozy, Comfortable and Traditional! New home in beautiful Tucker Estates. Tastefully built and ready for you to choose the decor. Inside you!! find greatroom with fireplace, dining room, kitchen with eating bar, 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, large unfinished area upstairs and deck $83300.

Your Hostess: Elaine Troiano 756-6346

cM,cu7s Quh. 758-0655

NEW HOMES

Available Now With

North Parolina Housing Money

Financing at 10.35% I

CAMELOT SUBDIVISION

WILL PAY POINTS and closing on this 3 bedroom home. 2 Full baths. 1210 Square feet. Energy efficient rated vrith heated pump. Combination kitchen/dining room. $58,850.

NEW BRICK HOME on wooded lot has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Kitchen with breakfast nook, dining room, foyer. Great room \A/ith fireplace. Master bedroom has dressing area with walk-in closet. Will pay points and closing. $66,100.

WE ARE STARTING 5 new homes in Camelot that can be custom decorated to your tastes if you buy early. Pick out your own carpet, paint, wallpaper and vinyl.

NORTH RIVER ESTATES

PRICED TO SELL! Nice new brick home with 3 bedrooms, 1 Va baths. Kitchen/dining combination. Great room. Outside storage room. 1143 Square feet. $45,850.

CHERRY OAKS

A REAL SHOW PLACE with lots Of extras. 3 Bedrooms, all with walk-in closets. Masi^bjfteQfi hM^ressing area. 2 Full baths. Large great rrWfcfitilieplcl Dining room, foyer. Chair rail and crown WRj^^rlMMH^OO.

STARTING NEW HOME in Che|rry Oaks. Buy now and be your own decorator. Choose carpt, wallpaper, color scheme, vinyl. 1700 Square feet. Mid 70s.

SINGLETREE

NEW HOME located on cul-de-sac on large lot. 1180 Square feet. Great room. 3 Bedrooms. 1'/2 Baths. Will pay closing and points. $S3,SQ0.

LAKE ELLSWORTH    t

BRICK HOME with 3 bedrooms, 2 large baths. Big garage perfect for handy man Qf<RPbM-ltia|Ms of built-in cabinets and work space. Forrm6ing()m Jopr, large den with fireplace. $62,500.

ELLWOOD PINES NEAR CANDLEWICK SMpUR^- S|Myevel home has 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths. SullliflviMooli. fning room. Huge rec room with fireplace ^

Tht.ian* Company also has othar araas and subdivisions In tha Graanvllla araa avallabta (or building. Wa will build according to your custom plans or choosa from our axtansiva salaction of housa plans.

Call Now For Details 752-2814

Or

Winnia Evana 752-4224

Faya Bowen 756-5258

701 W. 14th Strtet

Christmas is truly a time of giving. Let the JEANNETTE COX AGENCY spread the spirit of Christmas and play Santa Claus by giving you the opportunity to own the home youve always wanted nt a price you can live with Christmas after Christmas!

We have six beautifully designed and maintained homes that well talk turkey with you about. Give us a call.

Westhaven - this brick ranch with 3 bedrooms & 2 baths has had T.L.C. and it's condition is super. Extra large great Toom,| formal dining, eat-in kitchen, carport with storage. Low 60s.

^PEfiHOUSESSDNDM 2-4 P.M.

BELVEDERE 102 Darwin Court

Unique brick ranch on cul de sac features large greatroom with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large wooded lot. $76,000

Your hostess; Beth Potts

CLUB PINES 506 Crestline Drive

A joy to see-a greater joy to own. Four bedroom, 2V2 bath traditional on wooded lot. Screened in porch, sunken greatroom, over 2000 square feet. $100s.

Camelot - this 1V2 story cedar nome is ciean, cozy and comfortable. 3 Spacious bedrooms, 2 baths, living room/dining] room combination, deck and natural lot, assumable mortgage. Lo*' 70'

Tucker Estates - You must step inside this ranch to appreciate the many added touches that make this house so special. French door from the foyer leads to formal dining, great room with fireplace, eat-in kitchen and large yard. Low 70s.

Country - This traditional has lots of appeal in many ways. % of an acre of land so there's plenty of room for your spring garden. 2200 Square feet of living space and an assumable rnortgage that can't be beat. Low 90s.

Club Pines Rustic beauty on a natural lot, but the inside of this home offers all formal areas with crown molding throughout. 4 Bedrooms, family room with fireplace, deck and storage building. Low 90s.

Country - Designed for todays family living. % Of an acre yard which has been beautifully landscaped. 4 Bedrooms, formal areas, screened porch, workshop, convenient to Greenville. 80s.

JEANNEE

^ AGENCY, INC.

THANKS A LOT" FOR CALLING US! 756-1322 Anytime

T

Jeannette Cox I CRB, CRS, GRI 756-2521

Q

REALTOR

Alice Moore Realtor 756-3308

Valerie Dragoon Sales Associate 756-7171

Sharry Tripp Marketing & Relocation Director 756-1322

OlTfUOi

21

' r

TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

756-6810

NEW USIINGS... NEW PRICES

NEW LiSflNG PERFECT FOR N.C. HOUSING MONEYn^he perfect home for the recently passed lO.JS^rond money. Located at 2609 Calvin Way and in excell|pt ^^jion. Great yard with big fenced in back yar^igj^^^^yey Jcuiate home with living room, recently reiMero    area,    three    bedrooms,

carport with stor,    possibility    is assumption of a fix

ed rate 8V2% VA .!M with a balance of approx $26.000 and a total payment of $276.00 PITI. Priced at $44,900.

FRESHLY PAINTED AND SPRUCED UP. Located in popular Belvedere Subdivision at 213 Staffordshire Drive on a private street. This a lot of house for the money. Plan features all living areas with formal living and dining areas, family room with fireplace, big kitchen with extra large eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths, lots of deck space, garage for storage, owners are rpady to deal. Priced at $69,900.

BIG PRICE REDUCTION ON A LOVELY CONTEMPORARY. Located on a large wooded lot in Lake Ellsworth Subdivision at 3107 Gordon Drive this must see contemporary plan offers many extra's not found in the basic home. Large Cathedral ceilings, several skylights and many decks. Plan features tremendous living room-dining area with cathedral ceiling, family room, nice kitchen, four bedrooms with lovely master bedroom, two full baths. Priced reduced $5000 to $79,900.

POPULAR ELMHURST AREA. A lot of house for the money really applies to this hard to find four bedroom at this price. Located at 1113 Hillside Drive and convenient to schools, shopping and the University. Plan offers a lot of living-dining room with fireplace, kitchen with big eating area, separate play or rec room, four bedrooms, IVz baths, located on a private street with little traffic. Rented now but availabel in early 84, Priced at $59,500.

THE U. NICHOIS

752-4012

David Nichols 355-6414

Katherine Vinson 752-87J^

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G-12-11





C-12 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

N

Sunday, December 11,1983

A Review

A Little Treasure In Haiku

THIS MOMENT -    By    Jane    K. Lambert.

Greenville, N. C., privately published. Paper, illustrated. 48

pages. (Available locally at the Book Barn and at the Greenville Museum of Art Sales Shop i.

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There are those who stoutheartedly contend that haiku cannot be written in English or in any language other than Japanese. While it is true that the structure of haiku poetry rests on a structure of 17 syllables arranged in three lines of 5. 7, and 5 syllables that may be difficult to duplicate in English because of the differences of the sounds of words and the cadance stress in syllables, there are many who, on the other liand. insist that 'the haiku form can be successful in English.

A local poet. Jane Lambert of Griffon, has long been a devotee of haiku. Over the past several years her efforts in this form have found favor with writing friends - and with publishers

The 39 haiku gathered together in this limited edition 1100 copies) have previously been published in a number of literary publications - Dragonfly. Wind Chimes. The Red Pagoda. Parnassus. Western World Haiku Anthology. One Page of Haiku. Brussels Sprout, and in the North Carolina Poetry Society Award Winning Poems collection.

I^This slender volume represents the first time these small ^ gems - mostly focused directly on some element of nature, but with double entendres reflecting gently on the foibles of man - have been brought together.

Consider these examples:

-Bright Maypele-ribbons -fading in the sudden rain, dance alone

Big revival tent covers a vacant lot fireflies light the dark

-SHvereiFbjrmoonlight--the spider web becomes visible

Windfall of apples:

the pasture cow chews her cud

with dizzy pleasure

One of the major pleasures in thi&work is that Lambert has looked at the Pitt County world about her and chosen as subject matter for her haiku things at hand in the everyday world - cats and cows, beach cottages and shopping, a young man on a first date, deserted homes and neglected family cemeteries, old tobacco barns and moonlight.

Seven nice black and white drawings by the poet adds to the visual beauty of the book, as does the format - only one haiku appears on each page except for the final page.which (jontains a Ipnger poem form - a Haibun titled "Evergreen -Picturesi/an old album)."

Friepds who urged Lambert to bring logeiher these up to now scattered poems have provided an opportunity for those who enjoy haiku to have this fine collection accessible under one cover. Its a small treasure from a big talent

JERKY RAYNOR

B.ATH - North Carolina's oldest town. Bath, is ieatur-mg an afternoon of special events from 1 to 5 p.m. today The open house event, which includes tours of historic homes and concerts of music, will be held from 1 to 5p.m

Prominent historic houses decorated for Christmas include the Palmer-Marsh House and the Bonner House.

Sylvia Wall, of Beaufort, Coiinty and a student at East Carolina University, will perform an organ concert during the ^Iternoon at St. Thomas ^fiscopal Church. At the flmer-Marsh House.

Games From The Past Recalled

A BLACK AM) WHITE DRAWl\(.... of a saturniid moth is one of seven drawings by Jane Lambert used to illustrate her small book of haiku poetry, "This Moment,"

Free Open House At Bath Today

pertormers will be Clitlord Tretick. visiting arist at the College of the Albemarle: Dr Timothy Hoekman. pro-iessor of piano at East Carolina University: and Mario Hunter, artist-in-residence, Beaufort Community College.

The Colonial decorations can also be viewed daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Afee of $1 for adults, and ,50 cents for children will be charged except for the free open house todaV.

By Roger Whitener When we think of folk games we generally tend to go back to long ago days, sometimes forgetting that such pastimes have been passed along from generation to generation, though often with minor changes along the way.

Jimmy Carter, of the village of Maiden in Catawba County, has recently been concentrating on games people - particularly the young, played in the late thirties and forties. Chances are, however, that readers who have childhood memories going back to even earlier years of the century will not be left by the way, as many are ones passed along from generation to generation.

Carter describes several typical games, with pertinent rules and comments.

He writes:

Remember three-walking? Locate, a section of young pine trees, 10-15 feet in height. Old abandoned pastures or former farming fields are the places to look. Starting at one end of the pine growth, climb the first tree. Swing to and fro till you can grasp the next tree. Effect a crossover transfer,

Remember

TOP TUNES 40 YEARS AGO Your Hit Parade December II, 1943

I Note: The number in parenthesis following each song indicates the number of weeks the song has been in the top ten listing).

1. My Heart Tells Me (5)

2.    They're Either Too Young Or Too Old (8)

3. People Will Say We re In Love (23)

4. Paper Doll (14)

5. Pistol Packin' Mama (11)

6.. Oh What A Beautiful Morning (4)

7. ShocShoo Babj" 2)

8.    Sunday, Monday Or Always (18)

9. For The First Time (4)

Writers To Meet Tuesday

The first meeting of members of the Greenville Writers Club will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of LaRonna Murray, County Road 1204, about four miles north of Greenville.

Writers who would like to share rides can meet at Krispy Kreme on 10th Street at7:30p.m.

BARON N AMED

NEW YORK (AP) -Maureen Baron has been named vice-president, editor-in-chief of Signet Books, the mass market paperback line of New American Library.

Ms. Baron joined NAL in 1982 as executive editor and later was promoted to editorial director of Signet.

repeating from tree to tree, the idea being to get from one end of the area to the other without once touching the ground.

Digging a cave. Select a good clay Bank, compliments of a washed-out gully. Stay two feet away from the ground level in forming an arched (rounded) top. This minimizes the chances of a cave-in. A short-handled mattock or army surplus shovel proves ideal. Dig till you hit a hard place, then dig at a 90-degree angle. Soon as possible, resume a straight-back approach. Kid-built caves seldom run in a straight line - mine always ended up looking like a half of a swastika.

Five to six feet deep is a-plenty. Makes a good army bunker or a cowboys and Indians hideout. Hint: In digging a cave, reserve one wornout pair of jeans for Jhe purpose. Keeps mom from pulling her hair, come washday!

Making a slingshot. Select a suitable forked prong. Cut a groove around each prong near the top. Cut straps from old rubber bicycle innertubes, about one foot in length. Place one end of the strap completely over a prong, using stout string to double anchor the strap to the prong.

Make a p^ch from supple split leather. Slit each end. loop the other end of the strap through, and tie off with string. Use suitable roundish pebbles or chipped, worn-out glass marbles for ammo. Then practice, practice, practice. Hint: To save wear and tear on your posterior, never launch a projectile towards a window.

Bows and arrows, A 3/4 inch in diameter by four-foot piece of sourwood makes a dandy bow. Any stout string will do, but braiding three strands together works better and will last much longer.

"Arrows? Well, slender three-foot pieces, pointed at one end and notched at the other will do. Distance and accuracy are not a consideration since we never learned how to fletch an arrow. We certainly tried hut never mastered the art of feathering.

"Tree houses. Fancy tree houses had a trap door and entrance via a knotted rope. Fat little kids such as 1 found it easier to nail steps up the trees side to gain entry. Rope training would come later, provided free by courtesy of Air Force basic training.

"And then there were such projects as digging outhouse holes, stealing watermelons, playing hound and dog over acres of woods and fields, making tractors from sewing thread spools - plus two match sticks and a rubber band.

Those were the days!

Readers are invited to send their own versions of folk materials to Roger Whitener, English Department, Appalachian State University. Boone, N. C 28608.

Complete

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The Real EstateXorner

The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11.1981 .13

CONGRATULATIONS

Jane Warren

As Our Broker Of The Month

t

MOORE & SAUTER

ASSOCUTES

110 SOUTH EVANS GREENVILLE, N.C 27834 (9191 750-6050

Bethel A Nice Place To Live

Brick ranch 3 bedroom home with fireplace, 510 Barnhill St. Price reduced owner needs to sell.

825-5S31 James A. Manning Agency

OPEN HOUSE TODAY 24 .

QUALITY FARM

FOR SALE

5 miles north of Greenville. 105 acres

This pretty ranch located outside the city limits of Ayden is priced below the tax value for quick sale! This home would sell in the $60's in Greenville. Take a leisurely ride to Ayden and see this three bedroom ranch priced to sell for only $54,900. Take highway 11 to Ayden, go through the stop light to the next intersection and turn and follow the open house signs:

cleared land with 15,000 pounds (plus or

minus) tobacco allotment. Hog parlor and

feeding system in excellent condition.

HIGNITE, REALTORS

752-1010

757-1969

ANYTIME

CALL US FOR THE BEST SELECTION AND FINANCING

OPEN TODAY 2-5    UNDER CONSTRUCTION

CAMELOT Lookina for thai excepiionai buy. m a new home. Look at these stais. Nearly i500 square feet, fully applianced, patio, exceeds E-300 energy standards, large great room with fireplace. Builder pays points for 10V2% fixed rate RRM financing. All for $63,800. See today, you'll be pleasantly surprised!

C.A.MELOT. Offered at $49.900^ this three bedroom ranch offers all the quality of homes in the $60's but NCHFA funds at 10.35% mean monthly payments of $450 total with 10% equity and we pay points. Call now, one of Greenville's best buys for sure.

10.35% FIXED MONEY AVAILABLE

NEW OFFERINGS

CHERRY OAKS. Rustic ranch with double garage. 1667square feet, two full baths, lots of extras with patio. Select your own decor. Builder pays points for 12'/2% fixed loan. Occupy in January. Offered at $76,200. Exceeds E-300 energy standards.

THIS ONE YOU CAN AFFORD with an 8.75% VA assumabfe loan you Cn gel your family in ' this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with reasonable equity. Located west of Greenville on the Stantonsburg Road. This home has central air with heat pump, a 12 x 18 screened in back porch designed for the growing family. Offered in the mid $50's. Call today and don't miss this opportunity.

SHERWOOD GREENS. No city taxes m this 3 bedroofti.' 2 * baih .fwrrte -witfr -iTrepiace" antf' carport. This home qualifies for NCHFA financing at 10.35% . Call today for appointment. Offered in mid $40's. inside freshly painted. Some new carpet

AURORA. Live or vacation in this 2 bedroom mobile home which features a 12' x 30' family room, a screened-in front and back porches, less than a block from the water. Priced to sell at $27,000.

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bfcuioonr,*1V2 bath iownhouse for the same rrionthly-payment as rent. This unit was recently re-carpeted. Call today. Low $30's.    .    -    -

A LOVELY VIEW of Crystal Beach. Only 15 minutes from Washington. Scenic beauty - large waterfront lot, has bath house with separate cooking area. Perfect for the sailboat enthusiast Large deck overlooking the water. $34,500 with assumable 12% loan.

INVESTORS. Consider this practically new duplex near the hospital. Assume 13% fixed j,ate loan with payments of $367.00 total. Leased at $325 per month. Reasonable equity required. Offered at $40,500. each side.

FmHA ASSUMPTION in Deerfield. This three bedroom brick ranch is onty 3 years old, vacant and ready for you to enjoy low monthly payments. Offered at $41,000. Low equity. Call today.

FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot in Oakgrove. Offered at $41,500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end street. Income should be under $21,000. Call today.

THIS BRICK RANCH in Ayden is ready for an owner. Has 1150 square feet, central heat and air, enclosed garage and the owner has been transferred and is ready to negotiate. Has assumable FmHA assumption at 8%. Reduced to $41,500.

FHA 235 ASSUMPTION. Just on the market, this immaculate 3 bedroom ranch in Ayden is sure to please. Several extras including drapes; payments as lw as $240 per month if you qualify. Call today. Offered at $43,000.

,OWNERS SAY SELL NOW. Very nice brick ranch located just minutes from Greenville, Features living room, 3 bedrooms, 1V2 baths, fully equipped kitchen vyith separate dinette area. Extra room ideal for a family roorfi. Fenced in back yard. 10.35% financing available with 5% down. Reduced to $44,300.

HERE'S A LOG home with over 1114 square feet of living space that's just right for the first investment. Singles and couples love the value of the Homestead II log home which features 3 bedrooms, 1V2 baths and a full front porch on over % of an acre. Priced to sell in the mid $40's.

QUAIL RIDGE. We just started a new building with several flats and two bedrooms available. Give us a call and use our 10.35% fixed financing on these units to be completed this spring. Priced in the upper $40s to mid $60's. Call now to get the best selection.

COUNTRY PLACE. Select your plan now arid take advantage of wooded lots, secluded privacy, custom features and 10.15% NCHFA funds. Quality not often found in an 1100 square foot home. Priced at $48,400 and extra energy , efficient.

TWIN OAKS. Great investment. No closing or points. 1200 square foot ranch leased at $425 per month. Assume 12% FHA loan of $36,000. Offered at $48,900. Call today. Exceptional buy for the area.

IMAGINE! A house in the city with so much room priced under $50,000. Youll love the fenced and tree shaded backyard and the family loom with big brick fireplace. Extra room with beauty shop could be a place to work at home or extra bedroom. Comeout and see it today!

CUSTOM BUILT 2051 square foot 2 story brick home with Florida room. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, basement and outside storage building. $51,500. New roof, good condition.

EXTRAS, EXTRAS in Windy Ridge with this three bedroom Iownhouse witn loads of extras. Jenn-Aire grill, washer and dryer, built-in bookcase, house fan, extra wallpaper plus front and rear parking available. Offered at $53,000.

LOVELY RANCH located in Ayden features greatroom with fireplace, eat-in kitchen with bar and adjoining area that can be used as a den or dining room. Three bedrooms, two baths. Covered patio and fish pond in fenced-in backyard. New storage house, double car garage. $53,900,

OWNERS ARE ANXIOUS to return to their homeplace and have chosen to sell their new 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch -which is only 15 minutes south of Greenville. Over % of an acre, circular driveway, additional detached garage used as a workshop. Priced to sell at $55,000.

8RIFT0N. Special of the week. You won't believe the space in this brick ranch. Offers over 2,000 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large workshop, two fireplaces. Conveniently located near schools and shopping. Call today for your exclusive showing. $55,000

JUST IN TIME! You can be settled in this roomy 3 bedroom home in Winterville school district by fall. Great low interest loan assumption at 9V2%, Modern built in kitchen and attractive great room with brick fireplace. Mid $50s. Call today for showing.

CAMELOT. Just started. You can select your own decor. This 3 bedroom brick ranch offers nearly 1300 square feet, large kitchen, great room with fireplace, patio. Offered in the mid $50's. Fix^ rate financing available at 12 V2 %.

PINERIDGE. New section. Been waiting for a 3 bedroom contemporary on a wooded lot at 10.35% financing and you want new construction with the builder paying points, all in the mid $50s! We've got you in mind with several plans to select from. Hurry and get the best selection of lots.

IF YOUVE BEEN waiting for a loan assumption in Quail Ridge, this is it, 1422 square feet with 12 3/8% variable loan with payments of $555 per month total. Patio, well landscaped and in front of pool and tennis courts. Offered at $57,500. Sound good? It is. Call today, it won't last long.

WINTERVILLE School District. This almost new home has everything a first time buyer would need. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room with fireplace and a quiet, safe location at the end of the street. Priced at $57,500.

LOOKING FOR A good duplex investment, try Tobacco Road in Shenandoah for $58,000. 12V2% fixed rate loan available. Gross rents of $580 monthly. Only 2 years old, excellent opportunity.

QUAIL RIDGE. Available in January with 10.35% financing. This 3 bedroom Iownhouse has been our best seller with 1422 square feet for $58,500 plus points. We pay closing costs. Select your own decor and move in January.

BRICK RANCH under constuction in the city. Winterville schools. Over 1300 square feet. 3 bedrooms. Select youy own decor. Builder pays closing costs and discount points. Offered at $60,400.

QUAIL RIDGE. Sumrell plan with 1525 square feet. Offered at $60,500. Excellent condition. Available 1st of the year. 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths with large patio. Excellent financing available or assumption. Call now.

FAIRLANE. This brick ranch offers all formal areas, wood stove, over 2000 square feet, on a large wooded lot. Has built-ins and many extras. Call today, Priced in the low $60's and convenient to shopping and the hospit&l.

NEW OFFERING in convenient Belvedere. 3 bedroom, 2V2 baths, nearly 1500 square feet. 12% fixed loan assumption of $55,600. Available immediately. Large deck plus extra outside storage. This Cape Cod is sure to please at $61,900.

MOVE TODAY! Near the hospital. Enjoy this rustic 3 bedroom ranch in quiet rural neighborhood near the hospital. 26 X 26 great room with fireplace, 12 x 12 dinng room, kitchen including all appliances and large garage. Immediate possession. $62,800.

OWNER READY TO SELL. You will want to see what you can get for $63,500. Well kept, beautifully landscaped yard, rose garden with 30 rose bushes, nice garden in rear and fenced area for dog plus carport and outside storage house. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room, dining room, den with fireplace. Corridor kitchen with plenty of cabinet space. New carpoet and custom made drapes. Located at 107 Fairlane Road, a quiet neighborhood. Call today,

NEW OFFERING. This charming brick ranch home features over 1500 square feet of living space with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, cozy kitchen and great room, plus a 16 x 20 workshop and covered patio in the rear. Excellent owner financing available. All for $64,900.

NEW OFFERING. Immaculate and well kept, this home has really has tender loving care. The double front doors open into a spacious foyer, leading to a most inviting living room with adjoining formal dining room. Patio doors open onto a 16 X 30 screened porch. The kitchen is well-equipped with spacious dinette area and ceiling fan. The cozy den features many built-ins-and a fireplace with Dare stove that can heat the entire house. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and one of the prettiest yards in town. All drapes remain. Ownerfnncing available. Priced to sell in the mid $60s.

RED OAK. 4 bedrooms-^pffered in jupper 60 s. Over 2000 square feet with fenced in bade yard and plenty of room in all large rooms. Recently painted and ready for occupancy. Excellent owner financing available. $67,500.

NEW OFFERING. River cottage. Home away from home. Nice completely furnished cottage within 2 miles of Washington Park. Large family room with fireplace. Beautiful wooded lot with sandy beach. 300 ft. pier with boathouse. $73,900.

COUNTRY HOME with 2100 square feet located on 3V2 acre wooded lot 4 miles West of Bethel on Highway 64. Home has formal living room with dining room and kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, carport plus a large outside storage building that can be easily converted to suit owner. Must see to appreciate homes many fine extras. 15 miles north of Greenville. Offered in the mid $70's.

CLUB PINES. Reduced. Price reduced from mid $80's to $70's. Spacious and elegant. Family room with fireplace, wine rack and built ins, formal living and dining room, built-ins, intercom system and much more. Call today, it's a steal.

. r

CHERRY OAKS. Over 1700 well used square feet of space in this contemporary ranch. Offers formal areas as well as convenient porch/deck area off great room. Large master bedroom with separate powder room and walk-in closet. Fully applianced with quality throughout. Enjoy country living across from pool and tennis courts. l2'/2% financing available.

OWNERS SAY MAKE OFFER. Must sell soon with 4 bedrooms and 2V2 baths and 2060 square feet plus carport and loads of extras. The value can't be matched. A loan assumption available with possible owner financing. Excellent condition. A must see for the growing family. $76,000.

CHERRY OAKS, New offering to be complete in February. Loads of extra trim and quality on a wooded lot. Large deck with 1800 square feet heated. Select your own carpet and wallpaper. This 3 bedroom ranch is offered at $79,700 with sellers paying 2 points for IOV2 % adjustable financing.

DREXELBROOK, Reduced. Immaculate best describes this 3 bedroom home with all large rooms and spacious back yard not to mention the rear screened porch. Over 2000 square feet in one of Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and roof. Call today. Offered at $86,900.

BROOK VALLEY. Victorian style offers all the exras, large rear deck, sun room off kitchen, built-ins, completely, redecorated, usable porches with back yard privacy, solar hot water. This four bedroom two story has 2450 square feet with a 10% FHA assumption available. Call today for details. $100's.

AYDEN. Reduced. Large traditional home available across from the Ayden Golf and Country Club. Over 2800 square feet of living space with large family room and game room. 3 bedrooms. 3'/2 baths. Lots of extras plus 2 car garage. Walking distance of pool and golf course and tennis courts. $98,000.

INVESTORS. Try on a 33% after tax return plus net cash return in 3 years. This quadraplex near the hospital will be complete in first quarter of 1984. Excellent construction with option to sell as individual units. 90%' financing available. Offered at $144,000.

INVESTORS. 7-one bedroom units in Bryton Hills. Excellent condition. 10V2% finan cing available, good cash flow. Offered at $160,000. Give us a call and get all the depreciation in '84.COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

RESTAURANT'BUILDING. Commercial building and seven rental units available for sale and located on Mumford Road Gross rents of $1400 per month. Priced at $134,000 Steady -nncome potential,- .

THIS COMMERCIAL BUILDING in Grimesland may be lUSt what you need to start that business you've been thinking about. Good location and priced to sell at $27.000 Call today for your personal appointment.

LOT ON 264 By-pass across from Heilig-Meyers Furniture Corner lot with 120 feet road frontage. $75,000

COMMERCIAL LOT off of Memorial Drive. 1 acre Across from Parkers Barbeque. $25.000LOTS

LOOKING FOR LAND to build a home or business on^ Over 41/2 acres available right off Highway 11 petyveen Ayden and Griffon. Owner financing available.

COUNTRY LOTS near Lake Glenwood east of Greenville Approximately /a acre. $7500 each.    ^

HEAVILY WOODED LOT in Camelot. Nearly 1/2 acre $13,200.

SPACIOUS LOT in Cherry Oaks. Offered at $11,000.

SIX ACRE BUILDING SITE in Knoll Acres subdivision, adjacent to Baywood. Restrictive covenants, city water Owner will finance at 12% with 25o down payment $33,000.

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BUILD YOUR HOME on this 2/3 acre wooded lot Quiet area adjacent to Griffon Country Club. Priced to sell at $8.000

LAND FOR SALE, 67 acres. Property ]ust outside of Winterville can be purchased as one tract or may be sola m increments of 5 acre sections (wooded). $134.000 or $16.500 per 5 acres.

$300 DOWN on Va acre lot 12 miles east of Greenville on the Pactolus Highway. Cash price $5.300, Owner financing available at 12% rate for 8 years. Monthly payment of $176.53. Call John Jackson, 756-4360.

BROOK VALLEY. Beautiful wooded lot located on a cul-de-sac. Great site for building that dream home Call for details. Offered at $22,500.

Office Open Today 2-5 P M.

John Jackson.........................ON    CALL........................756-4360

Richard Allen...................................................................756-4553

Tim Smith.......................................................................752-9811

Ray Holloman.................................................................753-5147

Teresa Hewitt.............................................................756-1188

Marie Davis.....................................................................756-5402

Harold Hewitt.................................................................756-1188

Geep Johnson.................................................................752-1561

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EVENT STARTS TODAY WHILE QUANTITIES LAS





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CtOSSWOtd By Eugene Suffer

ACROSS

1 Cluster 6 like a judge

11 Scarab beetle

12 Worshiped

14 Distant

15 Western howler

16 - Maria

17 Chemical compound

191-air

20 Distinct flavor

22 Attack command

23 Exanunation

24 Singer - John

26 Cruel ones

28 Ah's partner

30 Campaigned

31 Eventually

35 Put in reserve

39 Beg

40 - fa\ or Spanish please i

42 Whirl

54 Less sound.

8 Lad

43 Breakfast

as excuses

9 Wears away

food

10 Hate

44 Swerves

DOWN

11 Wooden lx)x

sideways

I glass

13 Impressions

46 Pea holder

1 mirror)

18 Poets con

47 Author

2 Wail

traction

Truirian

3 E.T.sship,

21 like tar

49 Mescal

for one

23 Dyes

51 Cutlery

4 Dole out

25 Show of

52 Wiped out

5 Iron

agreement

53 Clothing

6 Indy auto

27 - Kapital

joints

7 Scent

29 Unfortunate

Avg. solution time: 27 min.

amm

|TP^_ --Ji'r'eBRONI iBATH^MB.ATTfcK^ iTONSILiiE^E

12-10

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

31 Mote

32 Ranos relatives

33Chattery

bird

34 Ill Be Seeing

11938 song I

36 Go against

37 Revolter

38 Ceased

41 Pushawav

44 Stalk

45 Blood fluids

48 Roe. e.g.

50 Sweet potato

CRYPTOQLIP    12-10

LNAOTVZZNWYYATTAPATZ LW NHZ ZWJ VZ NHZ WPPZYTHJO.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip: THE HAPPY RABBIT HAD MANY BRIDES IN HIS HAREM.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: Z equals S.

Tks Cryptoquip is a simple substitution ciphe** in which each letter used stands for another. If'you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowe'is. Solution is accomplisheu by iul jkI tiioi.

1983 Kinq Features Syndicate, Inc

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 friDune Company Syndicate Inc

LENZS LEGERDEMAIN

DEAR READERS: We have had many requests over the years for those hands that we consider to be our favorites. That makes quite a list. For the time being, therefore, we are devoting the Sunday column to a series of famous hands. .At the end of the series, we will go back to our weekly question and answer column. North South vulnerable. .North deals.

NORTH

A 04

' K965 A 104

AQ7

EAST 972 AQ742 Q985 43

WEST .4105 ' J1083 KJ72 4962

SOUTH 4 KJ863 Void 63

4KJ 10854

The bidding:

North East 14    1 ^

2 NT Pass 4 Pass 6 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening, lead; Jack of

South West

1 4 4 4

6    4

7    4

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Sidney Lenz, the Grancb Old Man of bridge, was a man of many talents. His tourna ment victories spanned three phases of the game - whist, auction bridge and contract. As a writer, he was the first to write about many of the plays that have become stan dard today. In addition, he was one of the finest amateur magicians of his day, a high ranked table tennis star and a witty raconteur.

His many talents were evident in this hand. First, he bid a grand slam without an ace in his hand, almost a feat of mental telepathy. Then he used his magic to bring home the contract.

West led the jack of hearts, and declarer could count only twelve tricks -five trumps, one diamond and six clubs. It seemed that there was no way to get rid of the losing diamond in his

hand, since declarer would have to draw at- least three rounds of trumps before he could take any discards on his club suit.

However, the high trumps in dummy suggested a method that would allow declarer to increase the number of his tricks by one. He ruffed the opening lead, cashed the king of spades and crossed' to the table with the trump queen, in the process learning that trumps were 'i 'l.

.\ heart ruff was followed by a diamond to the ace and another heart, ruffed with declarer's last trump, the jack. Now declarer needed to clear just one final hurdle to land his grand slam - a club break no worse than J-1. When a club to the ace went through, the rest was easy. Declarer drew the last trump, discarding a diamond from his hand, and then scored the balance of the tricks with his clubs. Declarer romped home by the simple expedient of in creasing five trump winners to six - three ruffs in hand and three high trumps.

In those days, this was considered magic. Today, there IS a name for the play used by Lenz - a dummv reversal.

Send any questions (or this column to; Charles Goren and Omar Sharif, care of this newspaper. Each week a prize of a copy of the new Goren's Bridge Complete," a $9.95 value, will be awarded lor the question judged the best received.

Charles Goren and Omar Sharif personally cannot undertake to answer all questions submitted.

The Thames River meanders for 236 miles across southern England, with more than 1,400 million gallons of fresh water pouring into the tidal Thames at Teddington. The river supplies 75 percent of the needs of the 12 million inhabitants of the Thames basin.

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Q.-|g The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday. December 11,1983

BAKITONK SIIKKRIl.I. MII.NKS - is one of the cast of singers in (.iuseppe \ erdi's "Kmani." heiii" broadcast at Saturda\ afternoon over radio station WIIN, Uashiiiiiton, \. (.. if:! on the radio dial. The li\e from the .Metropolitao Opera broadcast of -Krnini" also stars Leona .Mitchell. Luciano Pavarotti, Husijero Hainiondi. .lean Kralt, Charles \nthon>_ and Hichard Jenion. James l^j^ conducts.    ____

Xarmen' With A Difference

Singer To Relocate

Jackie Willis Marin, a native of Morehead City who has been involved in numerous singing roles since coming to Greenville as a freshman at East Carolina L'niversity in ItMJfi. will be leaving the area in January to locate in Green Bay. Wisconsin.

She has appeared in numerous performances on campus and throughout eastern .North Carolina as w ell as With the Chautavigua Upera-Festival, the Boris Goldovsky Opera Institute, and the Norman Luboff Choir.

Her husband. Larry J. Marin, an employee with the Procter & Gamble Company, is being transferred to the plant at Green Bay. There. Mrs Mann will be teaching and pertorming m the Green Bay-Milwaukee-Chicago area

Concert Is Cancelled

. The mini-concert by the Greenville Boys' Choir "scheduled to be given at noon Wednesday at the Greenville .Museum ot .Art has been cancelled    '    .

Cancellation is due to con-ITictCwith other scheduled activities at this time

First Place In Cello Division

Doskey Feted In Texas Reunion

   '        new.iollv    in    DOlitan    Op

Jennifer Lucht, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Richard Lucht and an eighth grade student at Aycock Junior High School, was named first prize winner in the cello division of the Solo Festival sponsored by the North Carolina chapter of the American String Teachers Association.

The competition was held Dec. 3 at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem and was judged by Dr Stephen Shipps and Lynn Peters, both members of the NCSA faculty

Works performed by Jen-" nifer were "Sonata in C Major" by Benedetto Marcello, the waltz from "Billy the Kid" by Aaron Copland; and three pieces from "Suite Francaise, Opus 1'' by Paul Bazelairer

Jennifer was accompanied by her father. She is a member oi the Aycock .School Band and of the Greenville Chamber Players.

By JERRY RAYNOR == Rtfteelor Staff Writer

It was really a wonderftil occasion, said Henry Doskey. An accomplished pianist and a member of the East Carolina University School of Music keyboard faculty, Doskey was referring to the 25th anniversary celebration of the annual Hemphill-Wells Sorantin Young Artists Award held recently in San Angelo, Texas.

The reunion celebration was sponsored jointlj^by^The-Symphony Society of San Angelo in conjunction with Hemphill-Wells Inc.. a department store chain in west Texas which underwrites the prestigious Southwest-area annual award given to young musicians showing outstanding promise.

The first award. Doskey explained, was made in 1958. and it was in 1964 that I received the award. At that time 1 was an undergradute student at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. 1 remember that for my award concert 1 performed the Liszt Cpnoirto No. 2 with the San Angelo Symphony under the direction of Eric Sorantin, He was founder and at that

musical activities in which ^ he has beoi involved, this is the first time in my experience that I have heard of such an event, that of bringing together award winners over the years for an anniversary celebration. I think its really a fine idea."

Citizens of San Angelo unrolled the red carpet for the returning musicians. Those of us who could attend, 15 of the 24 previous winners, were provided a special charter flight out of Dallas^FortlLWorth^nd-were. greeted in San Angelo by the entire symphony board and the mayor of San Angelo, who presented us with the official pin of the city." Doskey said.

Doskey related that he. along with six other previous winners, was chosen to appear in a public recital program on Friday evening of the reunion weekend. The people of San Angelo^ a city ofabottt commented, en-thusiastically support the arts in a big way.

The anniversary recital." Doskey said, was held in the city auditorium, a beautifully ornate Art Deco structure. One nice touch, a

medallion cast especially in honor of the occasion.

For me personally.-Doskey remarked, the most exciting part of the trip was meeting the other past recipients of the award. A special fellowship evolved among us during the three days we were there. I had heard of many of these musicians. One among them, pianist John Owings. who was a student at the University of Texas while 1 was at Southern Methodist, went on tOuwiiLthe.Rayel Competition in Cleveland and the Allied Arts Competition in Chicago. Another of the winners is baritone Ryan Edwards, who sings regularly at the Metro-

The first private seburity officer service in America was..organized by Allan Pinkerton in 1860 in Chicago with six men to protect naeat packing plants and com-mercialhouses. ,

lltime conductor,_of the. new concert grand piano

orchaStra.

*'Doskey, a native of New Orleans who has been on the ECU faculty since 1976 and who has won a number of honors regionally and na-timiiijly. notes that in all the

donated by one of the symphonys patrons, was waiting on stage."

The musicians were also presented 'a proclamation from Texas Gov. Mark White and a commemorative

HENRT DOSKEY

politan Opera, and there is_ also the violinist Robert Portney who is now at the^ beginning of a big career. I certainly was proud to appear on stage with these people."

While on the anniversary trip. Doskey also performed recitals at ^uthem Methodist and at East Texas State University in Commerce. Texas.

Doskey readily admits to a special preference "for music by early Romantic composers like. Schubert, Chnptrr and Beethoevenr 1 aslo enjoy playing the music of 20th century impressionist composers such as Debussy and Ravel."

Since coming to "Greenville. Doskey has won several high honors and awards, including winning the Indiana University Doctoral Concerto Competition and the MusicaFArts Award of the Society of American Musicians, Chicago, ancTeafnihg bronze medals in two events of the International Piano Recording Competition. He also was a Fulbright-Hays Scholar for study in England in 1980. and has three times been the recipient of awards at East Carolina University.

His most recent local re-., cital was one he gave in Hendrix Theater on Nov. 22. His next local performance will be in February with the ECU faculty VVoodwind Quintet. T"

BvGLENNEClHKIE CPI Livelv Arts Editor

NEW YORK iLPIi -Bizets opera "Carmen" will never seem the same after you've seen Peter Brooks 82-minute erotic love-and death, blood-and-sand version, derived partly from the opera and partly from the original Prosper Merimee novel.

This stunning minimalist produc-tion scales down the -standard arpera version to four singers - it has five separate, rotating casts -and four non-singing characters, and cuts ' the ' orchestra to only 15 instruments.

The show, which opened at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on Broadway Nov 17. onginted at Brooks International Center of Theater, Research in Pans, where he has been experimenting with theatrical expre.ssion since 197U,

This "Carmen " - titled "la tragedie de Carmen" to emphasize it is not just the Bizet opera - surely will be bracketed with Brook's 1964 "MaratSade" and hic 197o 'Midsummer Night's Dream" among benchmark theatrical productions of the second halt ot the 2oth century.

The action all takes place on a bare sand-and-gravel space backed by huge wooden walls. The tragic love of Don Jose tor Carmen thus IS played out m an arena resembling a bullring, underlining the parallel between their love-death ritual and that of the bullfighter Escamillo inside the real bullring.

There is tar more violence here than in Bizet: the jealous Don Jose kills both his lieutenant and Carmen's husband Garcia, and tries to kill Escamillo. who later dies in the ring minutes before Don Jose stabs Carmen to death.

There also is far more raw. vulgar sexuality than the opera house's usual opulent romanticism. This is partly due to the clever, edgy re-scoring by Marius Constant, but mostly to the depiction of Carmen as an out-and-out , whore who doesn't really care whom she sleeps with so long as there s either money or fun in it.

The eroticism sometimes becomes deliberately comic, as when Lieut, Zuniga frantically strips off his clothes, tossing his socks to Carmen after paying her pimp. Lillas PasUa. Sometimes it is unintentionally risible, as in some of Carmen's seductive cavorting.

"Carmen " has quieter monents: there's no way you can make Micaela erotic, though she does get into'a hair-pulling fight with Carmen. The final death scene is positively tranquil untB Don Jose almost offhandedly plunges his knife intoCarmen's back Brook makes much of Carmens gypsy superstitions. She appears first in the guise of an aged fortuneteller. and later seeks her destiny in the cards while Don Jose and Garcia are fighting to the death.

And in the most memora

ble scene oi the produclion,. while Carmen and Don Jose are making love, an old witch-crone lights three-fires and makes a circle of ochre , around them - to symbolize death - as the fires gradually die out.

Brook uses no name singers. They all are pro- ' fessional singers, but chosen principally for their acting ability in a "Carmen " which is more "verismo" than the c nl ire 11 a 1 i a n v w i s m n -catalogue. The singing is all the more effective because of the acting, just as Maria Callas was a greai singer without a great voice,

"Carmen" is not ino percent effective "in Brook s conception - thrashed out over a period of months in collaboration with the singers - and there-always wril be opera loyers who leave before the end. But it is marvelous musical theater One even forgives the apparent use of a full orchestra tape to augment the tiny on-stage orchestra during the corrida The \ivian Beaumont has Ireen closed tor three \ ears in a dispute over its vast, unwieldy open stage tormat Brook's "Carmen" cuts the Gordian knot by raising wooden walls to mask most of the acting area and to bring the action to the very feet of the audience.

A salute to man-and-wiie producers Alexander II. Cohen and Hildy F^rks tor bringing "la tragedie de Carmen" to the U.S.. and coincidentally bringing the Vivian Beaumont back to life.

Playwright Christopher Uurang has made a career of using absurdist comedy-writing to puncture the hide of establishments he sees as potentially destructive forces - the church ("Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You" I and psychiatry I "BeyondTherapy ").

In "Baby With the Bathwater," which opened Nov. 8 at the off-Broadway Playwrights Horizons, he turns his caustic eye on modern parenting, which he sees as responsible for societys sexual confusion and intellectual paralysis,

Again, however, his approach is that of a naughty schoolboy, and the valid points he makes are muffled because you cant take his characters seriously.

Program Guest

CHAPEL HILL - Lindsay Warren, chairman o t Americas 4(Hith Anniversary Committee m North Carolina, will be the guest of UN( President William Friday on "North Carolina People" on INC Public Television stations on two dates this month

He will lirst appear at 7:30 p m. on Monday, and then at 6p.m. on Dec 18.

A Goldsboro lawyer and former state senator. Warren will discuss state and county events planned in celebration ot the arrival on Roanoke Island ot the lirst English settlers in the New World,

c V'. M

CC CHRISTMAS Af THE PLACE TO BE...

Santa's helpers are busy working to make Christmas shopping easy for you. A huge selection of fashions and gifts await you at over 70 stores, with plenty of free parking. Christmas hours: Monday through Saturday, 10am-10pm.

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Supptcmenl lo: The Diily Timet, Dec. 10; The Evening Telegram. The Newt Argut, The Dally Advance. The Daily Relleclor. The Free Prett, Dec. 11; The Newt-Herald. The Dally Soulhemer, The Dally Newt, Dec. 12; The Enlerprite. The Tributie. The Norlhamplon Newt, Dec. 13; The Roanoke Beacon. Dec. 14; The Chowan Herald. The Enlerprite. Dec. 15. 1983.

------    JtEVENT STARTS TODAYeWHILE QUANTITIES LAST

Belk Tyler has sincerely attempted to anticipate your demands for this event and has ordered what we feel to be sufficient quantities. However, the quality of the items plus the low orice make it imoossibl? to guarantee that we will be ^e to fulfill all requests. WE SUGGEST YOU SHOP EARLY!    

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TftaPay Reflector, Greenville, N C. Sunday, December 11,1983

Engagement

Announced

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We Will Be Open Daily Until Christmas!

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Council Honors State Officer

HELEN C.AROL ROLLINS ...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Bryan Rollins of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Eddie Franklin Move, son of Mrs. Faye Move Lane of Washington and James Franklin Move of Greenville. The wedding will take place Feb. 11.

WINTERVILLE - Silver Stream Council No. 45, Degree of Pocahontas members honored Marga Ross, Great Pocahontas of North Carolina Thursday evening.

The program for the dinner meeting was given by Lillie McLawhorn. Pocahontas members from Winterville, Ayden and Greenville attended.    

The program scene was a silver canoe paddling down Silver Stream River and villages along the way found members giving explanations of freedom, friendship and charity. State officers, Past Great Pocahontas of N.C. Almeta Harris was welcomed by Mrs. Ross and Mrs. McLawhorn presented her a gift. Other state officers were honored including Marie Stocks. Great Guard of Tepee, Sallie Vainright. First Great Scout, Mrs. harris. also Second Great Scout. Larrie Stox, Great Guard of the Forest. Pennie Dunn, chairman of great American Indian dependent committee, John Stox. Past Great Sachem. Fitz McKeel, Past Great Sachem and officer of death benefit department.

Mrs. Vainright presented a special corsage of Mrs. Ross in appreciation for having served and fulfilled duties and obligations of her office.

Pauline Ross was recognized for her work for the

council in a project for the good of the order. Funds from the project were contributed to Caswell Center in Kinston.    ^

Nominations for officers will be held at the next meeting and the installation will take place in January.

Mrs. Ross gave a talk after she received the tomahawk. The Great Council of United States will hold its 1984 session in Charlotte and Mrs. Ross extended an invitation to all Red Men and Pocahontas to attend. Great Incohonee of the U.S. Charles M. Johnson of Rocky Mount will be the presiding officer. Dates will be announced and final arrangements will be given at the Great Council of N.C. in Burlington in May.

Gifts will be awarded to qualifying councils at the Great Council Session in May.

COMPUTERS KILLING

DOWNTOWN OFFICES?

NEW YORK (AP) - The microchip-based revolution that is changing the way ^Americans work will also change the way they live, says a management information systems journal.

According to MIS Week, the familiar institution of the downtown office may be fading from the American scene.

Increasing uses of information coding, storage and retrieval are making the changes in the American lifestyle, the jqurnal reports, adding that by the year 2001

office workers witi their computer terminals will be able to work at hmne. integrating electronically with ~co-workers and central data-storage units.

As the office is absorbed into the home, and working and living space become one, there will be no need for people to gather under one roof in downtown location -and downtowns" as we know them now will cease to. exist.

Queen Wilhelmina abdicated the Dutch throne for health reasons in 1948.

Star Special Sale! Now In Progress Thru Saturday, Dec. 24

^rendlei

Mystery writer Ellery Queen does not exist. Ellery Queen is the pen names of authors Frederick Dannay and the late Manfred B. Lee.

201 South Tarboro St.. Wilson, N.C Open Monday Through Saturday 10 A.M.-9 P.M.

Gifts For Christmas Kitchen

Tf-

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Jefferson Florist

Wt's: 5:h

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

If you enjoy giving presents you make yourself, or want a stocking-stuffer for someone who loves to cook. I highly recommend a new softcover 48-page book, "Gilts From the Christmas Kitchen,"

It s a collection of fine recipes contributed by almost 60 food writers and cooking teachers (and a few restaurateurs) from various parts oi the country. They have donated their royalties from the book to "Meals on Wheels." an organization that brings meals to home-bound elderly people The recipes are for candies, cookies, preserved Iruits. savories, breads, desserts and other delights, spirited drinks. And for seven dishes that range from chill to a gratin of leeks The gratn was contributed bv master French chef Jacques Pepin, whom we are tortunate to have living in the United Ctades because he is a superb teacher and cookbook author and re

cently completed a remarkable television series.

The leek gratin is a luscious dish to bring to a "covered dish" party at holiday time. When we baked it in my test kitchen, we used a round copper 1'.-quart shallow baking dish and it was handsome indeed,

JACQUES PEPIN'S GR.ATIN OF LEEKS lu to 11 large leeks, trimmed of roots and heavy green tops 4 shces bacon, cut into '.--inch pieces and blanched 20 seconds 1 cup water Salt and freshly ground white pepper to taste U teaspoon thyme I'j tablespoonsbutter I'j tablespoons flour l': cups milk

1 cup heavy cream

2 tablespoons grated Swiss cheese

1 tablespoon grated Parmesan cheese Cut the leeks into 2-inch pieces and quarter them. Wash very-well and dram. Cook the blan-

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ched bacon in a saucepan until nicely browned. .Add the leeks, water, salt, pepper and thyme. Cover tightly and cook for 20 to 25 minutes, until the leeks are tender qnd the water has evaporated.

Melt the butter in a saucepan and stir in the flour until smooth. .Add the milk, whisking constantly until the sauce comes to a boil. Cook for 5 minutes. Stir in the cream and Swiss cheese, then fold in the leeks.

Transfer the leeks to a shallow, ovenproof dish and sprinkle with the Parmesan cheese. Bake for about 40 minutes, until golden brown. Let rest for 20 minutes before serving.

("Gifts From the Christmas Kitchen" costs $2.75 plus $1.00 postage and may be ordered from Irena Chalmers Cookbooks, P.O. Box 988, Denton. NC 27239.)

BARON .NAMED NEW YORK (AP) -Maureen Baron has been named vice-president, editor-in-chief of Signet Books, the mass market paperback line of New American Library.

Ms. Baron joined NAL in 1982 as executive editor and later was promoted to editorial director of Signet.

HERESAHALF FRKESALE THATS SUITABLE FORFRAMENG.

Ri^t now, the Eye Care Center is offering an eye full of frames for half pricelSo for the classy, conservative or colorful frames that suityourlife-"    style, visit the Eye Care Center, today! But remember, in order to take

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"Located Next to Kitchen Cupboard" Monday thru Saturday 'tii ^hristmas

TREASURE - Leeks may be used in a nch and creamy French dish to serve at holiday time.

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C-2 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. DecemberH. 1963

Couple Marries Saturday In Double Ring Ceremony

Doctors Survey Shows Range Of Attitudes Toward Working Moms

Tammara Louise Leve> and Edward Beniamin Estes were married in a double ring wi-emoiiy Saiurda> at-termwn at two o elook The Ke\ Lawrence P Hou>ton Jr pertormed the ceremony in St Paul s Episcopal Church Sharon Irwin proented a program oi organ iitUMc-The bride is the daUihter ot Mrs ,1ame." Haw Kins Leve\ ol lireenville ana the late Lt l.eve\, IS. tier grandmother n Mr" Peei-Paul A'hlon sr o-' (ireenville The nria.e-groom > parent> are Mr and Mrs William Wade E>!e> "t Arden

'Ihe bride wa." e>curted to Dr David 11 (,iin> Her main 01 honor wa> lie! M'tri. Pater Lrcrv-o!

(Anthia Este>. 'ner o: ne brideeriHim o: Araeia a;.a Helen Bridee> o: Kaieiub were bridesma!d>

Ihe-tatnei o' m-tnme groom Wa> t'ot- n.a!. alal-Lishei'" included < !-a McLawhon ot- Hetr.ei and Mark Powei:    Hen-

derson\iile The bride wore a tonr.ai gown ot white >Kened organza o\ er peau de MUe The _gown wa-" Ja^hHHed-;.Mth an open, ijueeti Anne neckhne outlined in \'eni>e lace beaded with pearls and iridescent >equin> The titled bodice al>o teatured the beaded grpp!u|ue.v.-ol lacr-fxtending over the waistline The iull sheer >ieeves were lashiont^d with deep - Vielo-nan cults encircled with chantilly lace overlaid in a BtU".H*l> lace motit centered with peai'D The lull ."kirt and attached chapel length tram were enhanced with panel" ot chantill\ lace m-!ersper"e(l with niltlc" ot lace and applujUe" o| iieaded . >ilk \'enne jlorel> . The hcHiinu'^aJuUtnum. w env edged in ruti led lace She wore a tingertip illibion \eil edged in chantills ioce to

Trrntpirmieitrr^'iiow-n -Tt-

wa> hold m place ti\ a .lulie headpiece Irimmrd in lace tX'adea with peai'D .''he wore . a diamond pieitdan:. a gitt oi the t^ndrgroom The tindr

Cal'r.cd a to!jJ:a; CaM'adt' u! ""'\n;c !ir:dai ro>t>', ro'.ai wni'f iMiUdue orch,-> and n,.nia:urf carnaVon" w:'n "Urac" <: nn.nitc:'., ::rd .n'n

Bv PATRICIA McCORMACK IPIHealtliEdiUHr Working mothers can expect a variety (rf answers if they ask ^iatricians about the wisdom of fleeing from home to the workforce while their child is in cradle - or in elementary to junior high school.

The response may depend on the pediatrician's age. view toward women (liberal vs. traditional, sex. and whether the doctor's spouse works or if he or she was raised by a working mom.

Older" male pediatricians whose spouses do not work and who did not have working mothers are more likely to be biased toward today's working mothers.

That-is one of the points made in the report Attitudes of PediaJricians Toward Maternal Employment" by Drs. Marilyn Heins. Paula Stillman and associates of the University of Arizona. Tucsoil

MRS. EDW.ARD BEN'J.A.MI.N ESTES

The honor attendant wore a wine colored chitlon lornial ~^own lashioned with a three tiered l)ertha collar, titted wabt bodice and a gathered ."kirt with a matching sash. She carried a classic boutjuet in "hade> ot pink miniature, carnation", burgundy alstromerias and gerbera dai"ie." tied with matching ribboib '

The altendant> were dressed identically .

The mother ot the bride wore a navy - chitton gown w irifa pink cummerHnd and the mother ot Ihe liridegroom "elected a pink silk and maiue \el\eleen lormal with A 'pink cumiherbiind Each .'.orea whileorehidcorsage The grandmo'lu'r" 't'the cuuple were gi\en white nrehidcor"age>,

The couple , will live in Huieigh .liter a wedding trip to 'hf Bahama."

Tho I'lnde i" .i graduate ot: 'he 1    o!    Nor'h    ('am-

hn.i 1 n.ipel Hili and b a .tl'.idu.re "lUiient ai Ea"I TAibMihtTT mref'Tty She i." tr :>'"f.i:'cn .i-'btji;! with I'n-

ot Tarboro and Mrs utto Dykstra Jr served cake and piinch was poured by Mrs. James Britt ot (Ireenville and, Kelly Richardson ot Jacksonville Dr. Dykstra provided music Goodbyes were said by Dr and ^irs David H Giles The retreshnient table was centered with an arrange-m e 111 01 f u i 1 m urns, alstromerias. snapdragons in shades ot pink and burgundy Hanked by tive branched^ candelabra holding pink' candies        

A wedding breaktast was held at (he Three Steers tor memlier" ot the wedding party and out-oi-towf^gue'sis given bv Dr and Mrs. John Ebbs. Laura Ebbs Benjamin and ('urtis Ebbs An alter-rcheaibal dinner was given by_ the parents oi the bridegroom Friday evening at the Holtdai Inn '

V\ rddili;:

[n\ ilatioii

The report in Pediatrics, journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, is based on research funded in part by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.

"The majority lof pediatricians surveyed i report few differences between children of employed motiiers and those who remain at home," the report said.

'One-third say the mother can go to work when the child is any jige. Half, or more, provide special considerations for employed mothers (evening office hours, for example."

.A large number of the pediatricians said they never give advice on the topic of working mothers. Dr. Heins and associates said.

"Regardless of the format of the survey questions." the report said, "the responses generated indicate that the physicians surveyed are supportive of mothers working outside the home and of women in general.

"It would thus appear that pediatricians are cognizant of the new societal phenomenon of employed mothers and are supportive of their -needs."

The survey was designed to elicit pediatricians' attitudes toward "one of the most massive lifestyle changes this country has witnessed - the burgeoning number of women employed outside the .home. "

The report notes:

-.More women are employed outside the home than at any previous time in

-Sixty percent are in the workforce, including 55 percent of mothers with children under the age of 18. and 45 percent with pre-school aged children. The last group includes 6 million mothers with 7.2 million children under 6.

The researchers also wanted to fmd out if pediatricians are knowledgeable about the effects of maternal employment on children, if they are psychologically supportive or working mothers, and if they provide special hours or special consideration for them.

The extensive survey, conducted with a questionnaire mailed to all of the nation's pediatricians! found some respondents biased and some not - depending on their views of women.

Also influencing pediatricians' attidude were the mother's reason for working, age and health of child, the report said.

Thirty-one percent. 5,758. of the ^iatricians filled out the questionnaire, a percentage Dr. Heins and associates said is unusually high.

Those responding included an over-representation of female and younger pgtlia-tricians. but the investigators said respondents in general were reasonably representative of practicing pediatricians

The doctors also were asked to compare children of employed mothers in their practice with children of mothers who do not work outside the home.

"The majority of respondents felt there was no difference in child development. academic difficulties or emotional problems." the report said.

However, nearly two-thirds of the respondents reported that children of employed mothers develop more acute infections.

Neary half feel children whose mothers are employed outside 4he home function more independently and that children develop stronger attachments to mothers who do not work outside the home

"When asked. Whose child has more academic difficulties'?.' the, majority of respondents Hn all sex groupings answered, 'The same.'

"Of those pediatricians noting a difference, the oldest group of women and ajl but the youngest group of men were more likely to answer. Employed mothers."

circumstances they would recommend against a mother working, the pediatricians responded!

-Childs (rfiysical health. 24 percent; childs mental health. 20 percent; never recommend against work, 18 percent; inadequate child care, 10 percent: childs age, 8 percent; mother feels guilty, 7 percent; no economic need_. 6 percent: usually say "do not work," 1 percent; other. 6 percent.

Assuming a mother wants to work for her own fulfillment, how old should the child be before the mother goes to work?

Seven percent of the pediatricians answered 3 months or less; 26 percent. 3 years; 36 percent, when the child starts school. 29 percent, it doesnt matter; 1 percent. A mother should never work.

Blomo

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Vito James Blomo. 501 King Arthur Road, a daughter. Jean Michelle, on Dec. 1. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Ray

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Billy Earl Ray. Snow Hill, a son. Jerrtione Alonza. on Dec. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

King

Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Earl King. 325 Bubba Blvd.. a son. Phillip .Michael, on Dec 4. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital

Shingleton

Born    to    Mr    and    Mrs.

Donald Ray Shingleton. Sndw Hill, a daughter. .Amaiida Dawn,' on Dec. 4.1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

.Moere

Born    to    Mr,    and    Mrs.

Joseph    Lwrence .Moore.

Grimesland. a son. Joseph Lawrence Jr . on Dec 4. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital

Gray

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs

Harry Edwin Gray. 415

I Happy birthday to a *

* great friend, Brenda, *

! and have a good one- *

%    Tracey ^

Engagement Announced

MYRA JEAN CLARK...is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Clark Sr. of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Charles Kenneth Hall, son of Mrs. Nancy Dominick Colville of Greenville and Charles F. Hall of Sellersburg. Ind. A Feb. 26 wedding is planned.

Crestline Blvd.. a daughter. Erin Sheppard, on Dec: 4. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Toler

Born to Mr. and Mrs Benjamin Franklin Toler 111.. J-IU Beasley Drive, a son. Benjamin Franklin IV. on Dec. 4.1983. in Pitt .Memorial Hospital.

Riggs

Born to Mr and Mrs Kevin Brian Riggs. Ayden. a son. Joshua Bradley, on Dec 5. 1983. in Pitl Memorial Hospital.

GreenvlUe's finest bakery for63years. '

815 Dickinson Ave.

Cakes, Pies, Cookies & Pastries For The Holidays

752-5251 ^

Capture That Adorable Face Forever On

Tuesdays

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Childrens Day prices on sittings and portraits Tuesdays Only Call 752-3980 to schedule your childs appointment

Deans Photography

203 Evans Street

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E-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday. December 1.1983

THE REAL ESTATE CORNER

Carolina East Construction Co.

&

Diversified Financial Services, Inc.

now offer

10.35%

FIXED RATE 30 YEAR

FINANCING to qualified buyers

FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION IN THE

BAYTREE SUBDIVISION

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Don't miss the special chance to buy. Find out if you qualify.

CALL FOR DETAILS 758-6410 752-7460

iS

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B. FORBES AGENCY

-756-2121

2717 S. Memorial Dr.

Greenvilles First CENTURY 21 Location

Office Open Today 1 To 5

EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

JUST IN TIME for Christmas is this affordable two story home on corner lot, with 2 bedrooms, and 2 baths. Listing Broker: Evelyn Bullock 7524707

HANG YOUR STOCKINGS over the fireplace in this 2 bedroom, well-kept home, complete with den and carport on corner lot.

INVESTORS! This rental property currently generating $500 per month income features 7 bedrooms, 2 baths, close to downtown $28,000.

REDUCED! Now s your chance to own a brand new 3 bedroom home. Possibility of 10.35% financing. 40s.

DREAM COME TRUE-Your own 3

bedroom cottage, completely furnished, with water access, $10,250.

DON'T MISS THIS Excellent Buy 4 bedroom, i'/2 bath ranch style home in excellent condition, 30s.

WALK RIGHT IN, Sit Right Down, and make yourself at home in this

2 bedroom home, complete with two lots 20's.

OUT WHERE NEIGHBORS are

scarce. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath modular home on approximately 1 acre lot Partially furnished, 40's.

ARE YOU A FARMER at heart? If so, see this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on a small farm in the country, Possibility of some owner financing.

MAKE US AN OFFER on this well-kept 3 bedroom home. Fireplace, fenced yard, covered and screened patio. FHA 9V2% APR loan assumption possible 50s.

SPACIOUS 3 Bedroom contemporary home on large country lot just 8 miles from Pitt Memorial Hospital in the 50.

HOME SWEET HOME! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 1V2 bath home Carport and palio. Possible VA 9/% APR loan assumption. 40.

WARM & INVITINQ! Beautiful 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch. Family room, large fireplace, and carport 50.

WAITING FOR YOU is this beautiful 4 bedroom, iVi bath home Living room, family room, dining room, and fireplace. 70.

SET YOUR CLOCKS every morning in this 3 bedroom, I'/j bath brick ranch house in the country. 40.

FHA LOAN ASSUMPTION possible

3 Bedrooms, IVj baths, carport Building In back yard with halt bath 30.

APPROXIMATELY^ 1 acre lot with this 3 bedroom, 2 bath modular home. Carport, and storage buildings. 40.

FARMERS HOME LOAN assumption possible on this 3 bedroom home Priced right $36,500.

PUT A SPARKLE in her eye with this 3 bedroom. 2'/2 bath home on corner lot. Special features in kitchen. 80s.

OWNERS ANXIOUS TO SELL. 3

Bedroom brick ranch. Approximately 1200 square feet. Beautiful wooded lot. 40s.

RETIREMENT, OR STARTER HOME.

Spacious 2 bedroom home with storage building on large lot. Possibility of some owner financing. 20.

AHRACTIVE 3 bedroom, 1V2 bath ranch. Living room, dining room, utility, and carport. 40s.

SPACIOUS 3 bedroom home with living room, family room, wood stove, garage, and carport. Only $22,900.

OPPORTUNITY TO COMBINE home and income 3 Bedroom home on corner lot plus separate apartment to rent out. Possibility of some owner financing. 50.

ANXIOUS OWNERS say "Sell" this lovely 3 bedroom, 1V2 bath home Living room with fireplace 50.

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY. 3

Mobile homes, and one house with rental income of $595 per month $32,000.

FARMERS HOME LOAN assumption possible on this 3 bedroom, 1V2 bath home in country. Approximately '/2 acre lot. 40.

THIS OLD HOUSE needs you. Quiet neighborhood, large lot, 2500 square feet, detached garage. Separate rental unit will help with payments. 40.

STARTER HOME-3 Bedrooms, living room, kitchen, utility, ceiling tan, and hardwood floors. 20.

NO FRILLS-Just Deals-on this 4 bedroom, Vh bath just the right distance from the hustte and bustle of town. 40s.

CONTEMPORARY HOME in country 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, wood stove, and patio. 60.

GRACIOUS & HOMEY! 3

Bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, family room, wood stove, large workshop with utilities. 60.

WORTH MORE, but owner is anxious to sell this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in country. 50s.

EXECUTIVE HOME In Lynndale. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas. Large wooded lot. Many extras.

YOU'LL FEEL SECURE knowing the kids can play safely in the large fenced In back yard of this 3 bedroom. 2 bath home. 30.

CHARACTER & CHARM Is what this 4 bedroom, 2/2 bath home has. Formal areas, fireplace, and more. 90.

PLENTY OF ROOM in this 5 bedroom home on large lot with trees. Family room, dining room, two fireplaces. 20s.

PERFECT RETIREMENT HOME.

Large detached double garage, two bedrooms, storage area. Large country lot 20.

SUMMER OR YEAR ROUND HOME.

Completely renovated. Near the water. Must see. 40.

ONE BLOCK FROM UNIVERSITY! 3

bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, kitchen with breakfast area. Great investment property. 40.

LARGE CORNER LOT WITH TREES.

3 Bedrooms, 1V2 baths, living room with fireplace, dining room, new heating system, fenced yard. 50.

COUNTRY LIVING on approximately 1 acre lot. 3 Bedrooms, living room with wood stove 30.

TWO FOR THE PRICE of one Two

mobile homes, 2 septic tanks, on corrrer lot. 20.

NOW IS THE TIME to buy your vacation home. 3 Pedroom cottage, furnished, at the water. $12760.

AGENT FOR CEDARDALE LOG HOMES

J.C. Bowen, Realtor, GRI On    Call 756-7426

David Heniford. Realtor    758-0180

Blanche Forbes. Realtor. GRI    755-3438

Ray Everett. Realtor    757-0530

Fvelyn Bullock Broker    752-4707

ItMllWlMK

OPPOrUMTT

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Who else wants to earn big money selling imestate?

Weve helped people all over town get started on the road to independence and high earnings. Through the CENTURY 21 CareerTrak'" program, youll learn the latest techniques in financing, selling, prospecting and

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MAKING HOMES AFFORDABLE MADE US NUMBER 1, CENTURY 2i:

C 1983 Century 21 Real Estate Corporation as trustee for the NAF. k and TM-trademarks ol Century 21 Real Estate Corporation. Equal Housing Opportunity fiJ Equal Opportunity Employer.

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED.

Duffus

Reaity

Inc.

'MEMBER

756-5395

RELO.

WORLD LEADER 1NRn0CAT10r

201 Commerce Street    .xn

NEW LISTING

CLUB PINES

Adorable two story with a floor plan that will delight you. It has everything, with four bedrooms. 2'/2 baths, living room, dining room and family room with hardwood floors, screened porch, pretty lot. $95.900

ON CALL THIS WEEKEND^

Sue Castellow Broker

During Non-Office

Piense (Qair " 756-3082

YOUR VACATION HOME

And not too far from Greenville. Ideal locationr at Kilby Island. Just past Bath. Three bedrooms, bath, great room with fireplace, central air and heat, screened porch, deck. $70,000.

FOR THE HANDYMAN

Bjl lhS threv rvdrixim and hornt- and l\ it l'- aw .n or r^nr Lii-.ng room dming room 527 iHM;

PARIS AVENUE

JhrYv rv-.ir.rt.m-    oaiS    ir.    riq room

rvaeatiurn-r^m

COUNTRY SQUIRE

A    loa'' .isNjmpt. .n r rS jjai.lvo ruyct

Tao .argv VlfHims Mih    J.rin.^    ated

hdvrti'J .d' A'am! .tie .ear

RAM HORN ROAD

Cojrify v:n^ di d n.jOYsl pnct I'navr rree-' w !h .rv>rt.m> lai'" '['.% riMjfP .1:'Lg dtid

'! * rtjds-i.. 542 y'*'

PINERIDGE

in fV .njrrr'v anc noi far ?r.m the medica. .ompicA Lo'ng for.fTi amniiarea three Oedrooms jr.e hath arpon 'Aoooed lot 542 iifH'

HILLSDALE Pn'ijre perieci' Tender loung care <hous ihrojgn n three hedroon .c-ittage Gla^wd m porch hardwooG luvjrs and hrepwce Corner \ and maniciired5wr ()wner avs Sell'544 ON THE WATER Your own beach front cottage    care \*;th

aumirum siding 1 hr-e ot-drooms bath living room pier storage    A vacaiion home tor omt.

S4i)lH'"

N C HOUSING FINANCE

Build v'^'jr 'otne r (-.jr.ir^, Sgu.r ana if quaiiK finance n anaet this gei.etujs .nu niereM rate program Three oedr turns hath    rg r xjm

ningarea Ca . js ,'or deta-.'

POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION

Or ih.i' pref, h(/me ir Hardee Acres L .'.rg rc^jm drungatea tree'xdrwrns ! 2 baths centra, ar garage

REDUCED

This n..ev .andscaped ranih home ha' three nedrcK.jms 1 2 nath in.-ng room iami;; ftom wii'" firep'du carpttr 'enc.ng Possible leni jptiun lobjv 54.Hb<K

PARIS AVENUE

Ar OKiei but remodeied two storv home Trree bedrooms iwO baths lover -nmg rrx.-rr. '.rep.ace dining juf,m pat.- hew .piumotng w;rng New kitcher cabinet} and other remodeling Femed yard Gas heat centra. a:r Piavhoavr and storage hu dmg 544'NHi

EASTWOOD

A ranch home on \.chots Drue Great roorri w:th iirepiace and woodsicne dming area Thn-e bednxxm' l-:.oaih' .atpor- cenra.air S4'fin

DUPLEX

In Cokjr.a .-.jge *. f' uc bedr-jcvmn barf, amg rrjom ara Ktcier .t each Centra ait B<itr Sides rented PuSsiPie -nsestmeiT oppFirljp-tv 54'9^)<i

COUNTIIY AND REDUCED

Two oenrooms and uo bath modern borne, .p the Cunlri, Fov<?i vL.th parc;jei fiofir' great nrtjm fifepldce ce.iingUn cenrra.art 54f^ffii

SHERWOOD ACRES

A conven.ent location for this nnck rar,i^' home Foyer hvmg room vnth hrepldie dm.ng area three bedffioms orwbath garage SIX'

WANTS TO SELL

Reduced m pnce and the owner wants to sell Only about a year old wrth three bedrooms. \h baths Irvmg room, dining area insulated garage and fenced retf yard You could not build a new one even close*' tothispnce $51.900

LOAN ASSUMPTION

Assume the loan on this pretty Edwards Acre home The seller will aiso finance part of the eguif. Three bedrooms l2 baths livingroom diningarea 'amiiv rcximifcithwoodstose S52 9X)

HARDEE ACRES

A pFJssibie icjdn dskumplion on this three vof'/.tr. and 12 nath ranch home I..mg ioi,m *ih fireplaie diningarea well organized kitchen paiKj paneled garage $52 900

Shamrock TERRACE

Possible itjan assumption Appealing and cute Three bedr'jom ranch vuih Pz baths king rrxjm family rr/jm wifh.replace .argepaiH' M.merv,! $57 500 '

FOURBEDROOMS

-JuM tTi. It. ind a lour necr-'/tim home at b a low price Livmg r^K-m with te;9id(e dinmq area two baths A'/Kideck t(jghiii$5l frOd

LOAN ASSUMPTION

A pcjssibie loan assumption on ihis two story home in Fox Run Three PedrtNjm 1'? baths great rtjom with firepidie dinmgroom wtjod deck garage V^>4iNKi    ^    ^

PLEASANT RIDGE

Vw -fit.- 1-        j.'t    ' P-i-asan R.dge .Ayden

Three bedro.'in' l.ialhs iw.ngrtrt.m diningarea heal pump C.'.vtc .-'tNar-i pomfs are paid

EDWARDS ACRES

Fm.a'Uf .. ur ' ew " mv m f.dwards Acres with N C H'.jsi.g f narii m.it.ec L-m .nteitM raU- ludib for qud'/ea buvers T^ree bedr-"m-s I'z baths living rtrt.m jinmg area 'Fmanung aiso available m C'.jnirL Squire Cferr, Oak'

PRETTY RANCH

'A.r tbte nedr'i'.ms an,: ;*<- bath.} r Avoen L.ving r'rtm^n-ng arta family.rf>>.rr. breaklasl area Two .'dC-g^rage Fenc.ng Garder^ and grape vine $55;(N^

TWIN OAKS

Ore of ihow ser, .'ule crtemporanes 'with ledar Si-i.f.g Three bedr<y<rr,' two baths hs-ng room with vL.N>d Niove dining room trwrmoparie windows pdi'.'. Pusstble fjar as'umpii.jr $')5i)0(i

TWIN OAKS

Ai .mpressive contemporary !f has three bedr-xims tw ' naths foyer grea' rotim with fireplace dmmg roc m fencing detk 55b btNi

BELVEDERE L '.ei-, ranch sl>.e home Three bedoKjms tw. bdtr.s living room paneled family room carport wcxkidecK Great area $')b.9it()

COLLEGE COURT

A ranch home on East 'Anght Road Three bearooms and Iao baths Ijvmgrjtim fam.;y room j.n.ngatea >creenporch carpnri 5'-*'k.

PINERIDGE

Great >ar assgm'piojn or ib;s new ntui Oftjpud FHA lil'.'l- APR If' years fixed rate moi th-, pdyineri' o 5>4. 22 Equity of about $4ikH' Three'tvdnxjm bnck-ranch living room wlh btepiace diningarea twobths de.k'S+ifi lOo

HORSESHOE ACRES

(-'P am; new ranch -n s spai - .js of ha' three bedroomi ana tw--. nath- great r-joir. with t:rep,die drmg, an.i carpf'.r! Neat tV hospiia 5-1

CONDOMINIUM ASSUMPTION

An .-v'e.eni ..an assumpiioi .r: th.N practically new Qua' R jgr ^m.Gomin.um Three neur<Hjms and 2': nath' great room Atib f,rep.ace j.nmg room deck If.'.jwaMdOua'R.qgeCorid'. ihi'jit' SofolK

LAKE ELLSWORTH

^ a.-jigrhj, ar. a (ireat place to raise your childrer P-jo U;qfU5..^-urtit fecieat'oni^iiief avaiiabfe Neat iVme.a.iu. .enter Prett, thre bedroom tw. bath ranch Lvmg ro<,m dmr.g rwm family rotjm with firepiace v>4't<iii

WESTHAVENI Vt this mpfjs.pg fanrb v.^rne G-mer lot Three befroom' two ba'bv t-,,er ,iv.r-g-r'xjm forma, dr.ng r-rti-r am.y t-x.m "replace idrpt.rl

' ' '    KILBY ISLAND con AGE

h-.jf piKxnjmty f', .'W' a Cottage m this bne area T'-.fee 'wcroi.ms ]. baths -.amg room ditvny are vreene.: p'.rc" jreatview b<jd!iand,ng SbblXK)

CANELOTNEW

A 'ew 'omt to be built Ranch with three bednjoms tw- Mb 'xer gredi 'oom with firepiace dmmg 'rt.m gdraUt Cb.yj>evoutcotorsnow $6991)()

CAMELOT

. /r.et /A * ff pretty farmhouse styre home Three vafrt/*' 'wo 'dihs foyer with hardwood floors great room wi I tepwjce dir.mg v^,rr\ wood deck le' ^ A.re range Vi9 900

KILBY ISUND ^feM. -o-na^ Alt a ^eai vtew Three bedrcxjms *ar* jirtrt! rV/T w'f tepidLe central dif ar.d heat r-e - 5 M

SHERATON PUCE

O' ,e'.e"r If, 4rveT,th.r.g this ranch home on Brfjfjk R .aa 'd -tvr ''ir.rt.iT'N and two baths Foyer .r,oor j.nrgrv^m iamiX rr>..m with firepiace vree'ed;/,*- lojVoafage fencing $72 000 CHERRY OAKS

Tw', .trt? ,y; "ar.ef fdftr home Three bedrcjoms wo 'rtj*'-- 'v,ei great u/m with (iteplate dmmg rrt;fr garage hb'ff walk to recreaironai area

REDUCED COUNTRY

Tf's uo st>r, v,rr>e r, t^w country at Paclolus has f#ef reouoed Atyjji 1 7 acres of lard Three '*    i,,ng rfxim dmmg rrx>m

si'uO, -arge Ourir, r.Uben double garage worhsbc/p smoKehoyW $7MO

CONTEMPORARY

Possible />ar dssurriptrc/T or, this contemporary on Red Bank'R'rtid Tf tee vdrvvms two baths foyet diningroom 'greairv/r. reOtace l7r5(X)

NfcW -WAITING FOR YOU

This brand new hnm m Cherry Oaks ha< three bedrooms two ?a(hs great roc-m with firepkjce and ceiling tan dmmg nmm wit^ bay wiiio-.a Very nice EHA VAofconventiona $'4 5rki CHERRY OAKS Chike Cape Coa with everything F'.yer living room dmmg room family r'Kjm with firepiace breakfast area three .bedfcioms 2x naih' com paciur pantry storage shed Niceiy -andsiapej $74 'k.Hi

STRATFORD

Thts beautifu. home s uniy three years '.h and s located on a quiet street Crinverieni 10 a.mi.sr everything, this two sio/y irad'tionai has three bedrooms. 2'2 baths great roorri with fireplace diningroom uooddecK $7b5<H)

PLANTATION HOME

Your,'jpportunts n. i.wn that v.ui.her: pKirilalvii style home In the lountry neat bimpv.n with apprnximaiety 1 9 acres of land and a two stai! sianie Behind those beautiful white columns is a foyer library Ath firepiace cvmgrpium dir,ingr(im family room with fireplace foiur bedronms and two fths split ran fence AssjmabieVAioan $7b,5tK. DREXELBROOK

One of Cireenvilws nxeo areas A 'pavious rd"ch home With three bedrix>ms and iwo baih li.yer living t')om dmmg room family roc.m *iih tirepiave screened porch carpor: $7b(Mi

LAKE ELLSWORTH

This ranch ha' everything vou ever wanted bwimmmg pfx-)i tennis courts and t ub house nearby Three V0frt-,rr t*cj bath ranch home with tover liv.ng room dm.ng r<K.m 'amny room with firepidce and ever a recreation room Jenn A,re range (ihd microwave over: $79 5(H1

CAMELOT

Enioy thi> ranch or, a beaulifuliy iandscapect lot. The price .s right Three bedrooms two baths loyer great room with firepiace dmmg room wood decK garage Oniy$7o00(i'

WESTHAVEN m

A conlemporarc that wi.: be vour first Kxe' Cireai rfjcjm with, firepiact dmmg area three Sedrcjoms two baths office wfyid deck carport Nh,ely aiidscaped ioi P.issibierf.an assumption $H2 5fXi

UNIVERSITY

Less than a Oiock from campus' Possible loan ' assumption FmiT bedrooms. 2* ? baths Ivmg room-dinmgnom huge famdy rrxim two fireplaces large dflic heatecJpiirch garaji $m7 ,5(fl

FOURBEDROOMS

and a two }iory home that you will simply adore Fntrance foyer living room dmmg room, family room with firepiace storage building playhouse Nicely landscaped centipede grass Westhaven 111 $Sb 5iKi

CLUB PINES

A io'.viy Cape Cod with an excellent floor plan Four bedrooms 2- 2 baths, great room with fireplace dinng room breakfast area wood deck storage burtding Pretty corner lot $9 900

CLUB PINES

Adorable two story viiih a floor plan that will dekght you It has everyihing with four bedrrxims. 2 2 oaths hv-mg room dining room and farnily room with hardwood floors screened porch pretty lot

mm

BROOK VALLEY

A iovable ranch with three bedrooms and two baths, foyer living room formal dmmg room family room with fireplace sun room recreation room two sheds $97 500

COUNTRY

Drive down the long tree shaded drive to this impressive sculhern colonial home On 7b5 acres, this home features a King room with fireplace forma: dmmg room famiiy rrx^m with woodsiove five bedrooms 2* 2 baihs study two screened porches wide piank pm floors carport, fencing ExcelleniVA assumable loan $99 4()()

CLUB PINES

Owner may confer rent with an opiion to buy% Corner 101 two story Four hedrorjms three baths, foyei kvmg room dmmg room family room with fireplace wlar hot water Morajv $99 75(i COUNTRY

Prtvdte and pretty Two lovfly wooded acres Four bedrooms and three baths Foyer living room, dining room family room with fireplace screened porch double garage AbeauK SlflhOOU

BROOK VALLEY

Great iocaiior on the golf course Four bedrooms 2: baths foyet living rcmm formal dining r'som lamiK room with firepiacY upstairs piayrrrom double garage Impressveisihewutd $117 5M A NEW OLD FASHIONED HOUSE

Old fashioned duratiility and economy with up to date beauty' Cher'shed memories *il* Oe made m the fam iy 'keeping r-mm with ro/y firepiace Children car I hurt the oak floors and mom will adore the miidern lerrAue range and many cabinets Excepfioraliy .arge dimng nKjm w... accomodate grandma' sideNmrd ''ji yo^i: use iie wet bar to enieria.r today' exei s The pafKU was nixed for the more funcliona. great r.xm large enough for your library AND game table Traditional firep.ace and French windows Open baKory oyerkHjks this sky lighted room Two attic accesses plus extra nyrmy outside storage $12b50i'

BROOK VALLEY REDUCED

, Reduced m price and or the gcjlf course Beautiful high wooded mi Or the tenth hole Four or five bedr.yjms three baths li.yet lumg rujm dmmg rrmm famiN room with fireplace library garage brick patrt, Now on, 5127 (Kki BAYWOOD

iXiihout dojbi a great piace ir. iive and this cedar Siding contemporary or. a one acre tot makes it all perfect Three bedrooms 2'. baths foyer great room with Slone fireplace inmg room Jennaire range Ibermopane wndui*' $M5KKi

'    LYNNDALE

Love.y beautifj. and spacious A four bedroom and 2; bath ranch home with lover, iivmg room and diningroom all-with hardw.XKi fioors family room with fireplace breakfast area solarium double garage or playioom walk up stairs to anic Separate storage building

McGREGOR DOWNS

Fantastic (.ontemporary with four or five bedrooms and I'2 baths Foyer living u/m dmmg rrxim large family room with fireplace pretry kitchen screenedporch deck garage $147 50(1 BROOKGREEN

Impressive Perfect for'everyday family irvmg and entertaining ever, downstair guest suiii for guests your college student or mother Five bedrooms three bath^ living room dmmg room family room with fireplace lower levei family room with fireplace beautiful soianum sewing and laundry room, workshop carport $15()t)l)0

GOLFCOURSE

On the golf course m Brook'Valley Very interesting colonial with-many extras Musi be seen Marble floored foyer, living room formal dmmg, family room with fireplace four bedrooms three baths large cedar storage cbset double garage basement ilbO.iXX) .

CAMELOT

A fine lot in this nice subdivision Build your new home here or purchase for your future mvesimeni S9 500

FOU^ ACRES

In Bethel Zoned for business Look at this kxation' $4(1000

RED OAK LOT

Spacious lot with nKe trees Build your new home here $9 500

14ACRES

Approximately 14 acres on Highway 33 East Excellent for mobile homes $70 (iOO

PINEWOOD FOREST

Choree wooded lot m Pmewood Forest Perfect site for your new home Sib 000

BUILDING LOTS

On Ram Horn Road ibR 15231 about 1 2 miles from the by pass Lots are approximaieiy 100 x 50 $7500 each

WOODED CHERRY OAKS

A really spacious wooded lot for your new home )l5X400feet $19.500

COMMERCIAL BUILDING

A 60 X100 foot metal building Excellent location on. 2b4 Bypass Farmville Covered unloading area outside fenced storage atea large parking lot Suitable for a wide range of commercial enterprises $99 00(1

alkdosnq

OPPORTUNITY i

WE SELL GREENVILLE

Sue Castellow, Broker And Insurance...........

...756-3082

Charlene Nielsen, REALTOR, Rentals........

.........752-6961

Thelma Whitehurst, REALTOR, GRI, CRS......

......355-2996

Kay Davis, Broker.....................................

.........756-6966

Shirley Tacker, Broker..................................

......756-6835

Anne Daffus, REALTOR, GRI.....................

Evelyn Darden, Broker...................................

......758-9878

Jack Duffus, REALTOR, GRI, CRS.............

.........756-5395 ,

Catherine Creech, REALTOR.........................

......756-6537

Frances Harris, Broker..............................

Sue Henson, REALTOR................................

.......756-3375

T

w

ERA SUPER BUYS IN HOMES YOU CAN AFFORD!.

NEW LISTING. Ring oi^ the news! Good buf Good assumption! Good intsrsst rate! Attractive brick home in nice neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, 116 baths. $46,500.

A CONDOMiNiUiM for $30,900. Thats right! Location is perfect for schooi and shopping, its a marveious opportunity.

2 bedrooms, 1 Vi baths.

VERY GOOD iNVEST-MENT property. Assume FHA 8%% ioan. Payment $168.00 PiTi. Rented for $200.00.

REDUCED. $55,000 to $48,000! Make an offer. Nice home in country. Wintervilie school district. Assumable 11 FHA loan. Principal balance $42,476.53.

REDUCED. $35,900 \d, $33,9001 Central air ar this price? Youre right! and much more. 3 bedrooms, family rooms, kitchen-dining combination, carport, etc. Nice brick home.

NEW LISTING. A price you can afford! Located in:^the city! 2-3 bedrooms, family room, dining room. Nice aluminum siding exterior. $23,500.

GET STARTED in this country farm style home and enjoy yourself. Very cozy 2 bedroom with attractive kitehan furnished with stove and refrigerator. Cut grocery bill by having your own garden. $29,900.

THIS HOME IS located in an area where homes sell from $40,000 to $60,000. A facelift would add immediate equity to thts nice brick home. A(| appliances including washer and dryer furnished. $35,900.

LOOKING FOR elbow room? This condominium has three floors and so much living space. Beautifully decorated and functional floor plan. Near university. $44,500.

SOLD IN EIGHT DAYS but back on the market! Now you can be the lucky owner of this beautiful home located in Ellwood Pines. Very near hospital. Wooded lot. Call today for details. $62,500.

HERES WHAT youve been looking for. A very attractive contemporary located in country with assumable FHA 235 loan. Excellent monthly payment if qualified. $49,500.

GOT CHILDREN OR PETS? Youll love this extra large fenced in yard for them. Wooded lot and no traffic. Home has many nice features. $56,900.

IF YOURE LOOKING for a deal, weve got it! Owner says sell this large, white brick home featuring 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, family room with fireplace, extra large recreational room, double carport and outside building. Assumable VA loan at 8% plus owner financing. $79,900.

THERE ARE HOMES and than there are quality homes. Owner has moved and needs to sell.

3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, den or dining room, carport, beautiful large yard. Exceptional neighborhood. $62,900.

A VERY LIVABLE 2 story home is our special today! 1,650 square feet, all formal areas, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 21^ baths. Nice quiet neighborhood. $64,900.

OVERTON

&

POWERS

355-6500

t





The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C. Sunday. December n. 1983    C-13

Exhibit Of Grand Prix Art

NEW YORK - The first exhibition ever devoted to the prestigious painting competition, the Grand Prix de Rome, will begin its tour to eight United States cities beginning at the National Academy of Design on January 10.

Featuring 86 prize-winning canvases, supplementd by related drawings and documentary photographs on loan from the Fcole Nationale Supeieure de Beaux-Arts in Pans. 'The Grand Prix de Rome: Paintings from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, 1797-1863. traces the history of the competition as well as the progression of an award-winning work from first sketch to esquisse (painted sketchi to finished canvas, This unprecedented show of monumental masterpieces of French academic art is being circulated bv the International Exhib-

GAIL RITZKKS .SHOW ... of ritualitic art. currently on view in the North (iailerv of the (ireenville Museum of Art. features this wall work comprised of clay, sticks, hones and feathers.

SMALL PINE TWKiS ... are inserted in holes of a ceramic mask, with bones and fiber filaments adorning a length of bamhoo and a fringed piece of weaving in this Gail Ritzer work, one of 29 at G.M A.

In Gail Ritzer's Exhibit At GMA

Rif val And Magic In Art Work

It has a distinct aura of ritual magic, and is a tangible creation of the mysteries of*a dream world. Gail Leadingham Ritzer's show of mixed media work at the Greenville Art Center evokes echoes of things randomly seen somewhere in the past or hazily remembered from a book or film from our long , ago years. These are pieces sure to stir the imagination of many viewers who might be on the same imagery u- wpfenpht OS    _

, These 29 pieces, none very ; large, have a childlike sim-plicity crafted by a talented young adult who gives every

evidence of knowing what she wants to achieve and is achieving it.

There are references to shamanistic rites, to American Indian art, and even further back in time to the cave art at Lascaux. Yet these are references, a springboard for her delightful creations that are by no means slavish copying of folk or ritual art. Kitzer has used ceramic slabs and bowl-shaped pieces in primary <eartb colors as the basis for wall sculpture and standing pieces. To these basic items, she has incorporated a veritable cornucopia

of mostly natural and a few items of man made materials - Spanish moss and eggshells, bones and laces, twigs, straw, broken bits of glass, pine needles and pine

Celebration At Gastonia

Another Doll Art

GASTONIA - A Colonial Christmas and Candelighting is being celebrated on Sunday. Dec. 18 at the pioneer

ei*0 nf SJiihiolg

Natural History. 15uo Garrison Blvd., Gastonia.

On that date, menfolk will discharge firearms through the branches of trees to dispel evil spirits lurking there, and women and children will deck the log homestead with ivy, holli'. pine and rosemary.

A simple candlelighting cermony will take place at dusk, with singing of carols and reading of scripture. The evening will end with the lighting of a traditional bonfire, with sprigs of greenery tossed into the fire while celebrants join hands to make a circle around the fire.

The event is free and open to the public, with no reservations required.

Thieves stole $7.5 million in notes and jewelry from a British mail train in 1963 in what has become known as the Great Train Robbery.

twigs, feathers and filaments of textiles, small shells and fragments of antlers, and stones. If this list gives the impression the finished pieces are fussy with ornamentation - that IS not the case. Ritzer knows when to stop.'    ^

Dexterity in shaping the day is apparent - whether it is the solemn faces of masks, strips Tashioneti in a loose basket type weave, or bird nest shaped containers. One . of the most, intriguing pieces,., is 'Cherokee Legcy, a small tepee enclosing a basket filled with miniature objects.

The deep-sealed cons-cienceness of ancient wonder still alive in man's heart is expressed in Ritzer's visual images and are heightened by the sounds of words provided in her choice of titles -ritualistic ones such as Ghost Shield I or Magic Shield, or more exotic connotations -Trinidad Carnival. Toucan Tango.

This is a show to delight youthful viewers of any age.

Ritzer IS a graduate of East Carolina University whose work is currently represented in the American Museum of Natural History Gift Shop in New York City, at the Jewish Museum in New York, the United Nations Gift Shop, and Bloom-ingdale's store among other places. She is the winner of numerous awards.

itfohs "Foundation of Washington. D. C.

The works represented here epitomize the very highest official standards of figure, landscape and history painting as established by the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in the late years of the 18th century. Mythological. Bibical and landscape images by such acclaimed artists as Ingres. Guerin. Bourguereau and the four chefs d'atelier - Vincent,-David. Kegnault and Girodet appear in the exhibition.

One of the s'how's highlights is the young Ingres' ".Achilles Receiving the Envoys of Agamemnon for which he won the Prix de Rome in 1801.

Phillipe Grunchec, curator of the Ecole's collections, wrote in the show's comprehensive catalogue, "drawing comprised the core of art instruction at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts" Students drew from life and from plaster casts. The Ecole's rigorous training also demanded mastery of fun: "^^uainenial design" techniques such as perspective and composition. Characterized by, .tight renderings and jewel-like 'surfaces, these works represent the very best of the French academic

tradition.

Winners of the coveted Grand Prize were awarded with several years' study in Rome.

The Ecole is the paradigm for academic training - one that is particularly relevant for American art. The Ecole served as a model for its United States counterparts, the National Academy of Design and the Pennsylvania .Academy of Fine Arts.

The French_jnasterworks represented in this exhibition. then, are not only notable for their great technical virtuosity ; ihgiL. also enhance our awareness of the American academic tradition. Grand Prix de Rome is one of the many international exhibitions presented by the National Academy of Design to enlighten viewers on the rich roots of American art.

Bernard VernieciPalli

French Ambassador to the U.S., is serving as honorary patron of the exhibition and tour, both supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities, and by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional funding has been provided by the Association Francaise d'Action Artistique.

The Ecole has prepared a 475 page inventory that includes color reproductions of all the prize-winning paintings and more than 700 black and white reproductions. This volume, in French, will sell for $55 and will be the complete record of the Prix de Rome competition between 1797 and 1863.

An exhibition catalog, written by French scholars and available in English, will be published in January. The

T68 page Soft cover book will contain eight color and 143 black and white reproductions and will sell tor S18 It is underwritten in part by the Andrew W, Mellon Foundation.

After opening at the National Academy of Design in .New York, the exhibition will travel to museums in Richmond. Indianapolis.

Baltimore. Phoenix. Palm Beach. San Antonio, and New Orleans The National Academy of Design is located at I83 Fifth Avenue in New York City Gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m Tuesdays through .Sundays .Admission is S2. SI..50 for senior citizens and students, and is free trom 5 to 8 p.m. on Tuesdays

OUTLET

Thursday Lecture

ATLANTIC BE.ACH - A lecture open to the public is being given at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the N. C. .Marine Resources Center, Bogue Banks. Dr, Don floss of the .National .Marine Fisheries Service will talk on the topic. "Oil Pollution and the Marine Environment."

The center is located six miles west of Atlantic Beach m the Theodore Roosevelt natural area.

JERRY RAYNOR

POET CITED NEW YORK (API - The chancellors of the Academy of American Poets recently named Philip Booth the 45th recipient of a $10,000 fellowship for "distinguished poetic achievement.''

MOOSE LODGE

New Years Eve Party Sat., Dec. 31

Ham & Egg Breakfast Music By Fortunes Combo Dress; Coats & Ties Lodge Members & Guests

Donation;    Dancing;

$25.00 Per Couple    9:00    Til    1    ;00

rT:::.::";:: ...... ..:

lspmtswu

PRESENTS

i    A LOOK-.AlJKE DOLi. - Singer    Bov    (leorge ol the Culture

;    Club pop group clutches a    look-^alike    dull as he arrives at

   I.ondons Heathrow Airport    from    I.os    Angeles recently . Boy

I    George had been in the    U.S.    on    a series of personal

' appearances. (APLaserphoto)

For Tickets & Scat Selections Call: 756*4375

:    DEMO.NSThATIOV

::ONWREATHM.AKING :WLMINGTON - Barbara ;Prather will be demonstrat-;ing techniques for making pine cone wreaths at New Hanover Countv Museum.

Market Street. :Wilmington. from 2 to 5 p.m. ;today. The event is open to flie public without charge.

; OPEN HOUSE TODAY ; BEAUFORT - The eighth

I:;annual Christmas Open House of Hampton Mariners

Museum, 120 Turner Street. * Beaufort, is being held today (Ifrom 3 to 5 p.m. at the Ujpuscum. The event is free I *tith the public invited.

Pre-Christmas SALE

25%

Ail Tama Drums O Off Musicman Amplifiers

Gift Certificates Available 218AE. 5th St.

Open 10:30 til 9:00 Mon.-Sat.

752-1159

EXPERIENCE

MICHAEL JACKSON & MORE...

i

T

liM

On The Lagsi Video Screen In Eastern North Carolina!!

The Most Powerful Stereo System Accompaines This Awesome 10 x 16 Foot Video. An Experience You Wont Want To Miss...

Now At Snortsworld

MTVi

IMTVi

s





DlDCPoilsiM*Ar Pranure gauge.

31(1-6,12)





SAVE 30-51 on these

Craftsman portable power fools

3/8-in. drill with cord lock. 2/5-HP. Variable-speed. Ncrloac! speeds frorn 0'1200 rpm. RcvGrsiblc $01 18*

1 -HP router. Ring-type depth adjustment. Shaft lock for easy bit changes. No-load speed of 25,000 rpm. Reg. $89.99

Dual-motion pad sander. A-HP. For rough and fine sanding. With dust pick-up to keep area clean. Reg. $69.99

Variable-speed sabre saw. V4-HP. With circle-cutting attachment and edge guide. Reg. $69.99

-YOUR CHOICE

Regular separate prices total

$

20 - *40 OFF

Craftsman power lawn tools

A. ElectricWeedwacker.3/8-HP.Cutsa 16-in.

swath. Reg. $59.99................29.99

B. Electric power blower. 1-HP motor. Full-range speed control Reg $99.99.. . 59.99

C. Electric Bushwacket* hedge trimmer. Double-edged blade Reg $59.99 ... 39.99

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

15529

A

79973

SAVE *35 - *56

on Craftsman portable power tools. Perfect for gift giving or owning.

59

99

YOUR CHOICE

$95.98* 3/8-HP sander-polisher with carrying case.

2-speeds.

$116.98* 7%-in. circular saw with case. 2 1/8-HP. Includes blade and wrench.

$115.98* 3-in. belt sander with case. 1-HP. No-load speed of 1300 ft per minute.

Regular separate prices total    Sale ends December 24

SAVE *7

on Sears Best Easy Living 1-coat interior latex

9

99

Satin flat or bright white ceiling, gal.

tpray<

Special purchase Sears Best sprayer kit with Permanex* case, spray tig 5-ft suction set and 2 extra valves.

While quantities last

G^12-ii

Choose our best interior paint for a scrubbable coverage that resists spots and staina Creamy thick latex isavailable in yourchoice of 23 colorfast colora Reg. $16.99

$18.99 Semi gloss....................gal.    11.99

For one-coat resulte all Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed

78005

91005

,13





D4368

SAVE OVER 50%

Craftsman 90-pc. tool set

Advanced mechanics tool set is ideal for home and general-purpose auto repairs. Set includes:

1, 3/8, Vz-in. drive sockets and accessories; wrenches and more. Reg. separate prices total S204.08. Thru Dec. 24,

Gifts are Craftsman brand unless designati

A. $66.36* 14-pc standard screwdriver set Ten slotted, four phillips... 24.99

B. $48.63* Sears 14-pc. tool set Screwdrivers, pliers, wrench 22.99

C. $44.99 Heavy-duty bench vise. Opens to 4-in. Base swivels.... 24.99

D. $29.99 5-pc. ratcheting box-end wrench set Pouch...........22.99

E $46.96* 4-pa pliers set Heat-treated steel .................24.99

F. $49.00* 19-pc. high-speed drill bit set Heat-treated.............22.99

*88

*Regular separate prices total A 44627

Sale ends December 24

SAVE OVER 50%

Craftsman 200-pc. mechanics' tool set

188

ONLY

Includes 3 quick-release ratchets, regular and deep-depth sockets; and more. Reg. separate prices total $505 82. Thru Dec. 24.

Craftsman Hand Tool Full Unlimltad Warranty

If any Craftsman hand tool ever fails to give complete satisfaction, return it for free replacement

SAVE MO

Craftsman flat-top tool box

Reg. $29.99    ]

Rugged steel construction. Holds tools up to 17-in. long.

Ask about Sears Credit Plana

H 45285

GIFTS UNDER

Tools are Craftsman brandunless designated Sears

A $27.45* 6-pc. open-end wrench set.............................12.99

B. $56.41* 9-pa punch and chisel set Rugged....................12.99

C. $33.92* 8-pc. screwdriver set Va, 3/8, Vz-in. drive................12.99

D. $26.97* 3-pc. universal joint set popular sizes.................. 12.99

E $19.99 Sears 40-drawer bench-top organizer..................13.99

F. $18.99 Sears Screwball* tool kit................................12.99

G. $24,97* 3-pc. locking pliers set Jaws adjust...................,12.99

H. $33.97* 3-pa pliers set 3-styles................................12.99

*Regular separate pricea total    Sale    ends    December    24





>?y

3

Our Sior^:

PRINCE VALIANT CATCHES HIS BREATH INSIPE BERLIN'S CAVE FOR IT IS BRI6HT AS RAY ANP A coa, FRESH WINP TOUSLES HIS HAIR. WITH HONORS HE POLES ACROSS THE SHALLOW LAKE, E5C0RTEP BV THE PEHIZENS OF ME^RLIN'S PRIVATE SEA.

PLMCtHA^ CHANtP S/NCC L3T YOU mfeHERE,''SMS HONORS. "SO HASMERU."

IN THE OREAT LP6E HONORS KNOCKS ANP THEN RUTS HIS SHOULPER TO A HEAW POOR. IT OPENS. ''Tli LEAvE rOurri, SIR miANT.

MERLIN SITS ALONE. "yS. rT/$ I. GPOYYN QEP ANQ PECREPIT, PROM THE'POKERs'OPA/H5H7 J ASKEP POR iMMORTAury 0UT POR<SOT TO ASK POR YOUTH. COMB, LET ME TOUCH YOUR HAIR ANP KNOW U/S YOU. ANP NOW THE S/NO/AIG SVOKP\... AH, THE POWER YS ST/LL THERE.'

"PEAST YOUR EYES ON MY LOPOE. YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN /T 0EPORE ANP 1 SHALL NEVER SEE IT AOAfN. IS MY CANE ST/U fN THE CORNER? HE LOOKS AT VAL WITH VACANT EVES. PRINCE VALIANT NOPS IN REPLV, ONLY TO HEAR MERLIN REPEAT THE OUERY, FOR MERLIN IS NOW 0LINP.

VAL brings him the CANE ANP THE SORCERER PAINFULLY WALKS FROM THE ROOM, GRIPPING TABLES ANP CHAIRS FOR GUIPANCE ANP SUPPORT. PRINCE VALIANT FOaOWS.

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WHEN THEY COME TO A LARGE POOL, /MERLIN WAVES HIS HANP OVER THE WATERS ANP THERE APPEARS AN I/MA6E. "MAEVE"SAYS MERLIN SOFTLY. '^YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN HER. THIS tS THE HUNTRESS WHO CAPTIVATES YOUR SON ANP MAPE KtNS ARTHUR PLY INTO A PASE. SHE IS A WELL -KEPT ROYAL SECRET. IBROUSNT YOU HERE TO WARN YOU. "

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Wartime Allies Ignored Wdrning Of Hitler's Plan

By STEVEN DONZIGER WASHINGTON (UPI) - When two American University history professors recently identified the German industrialist who first told the Allies of Hitlers final solution to the Jewish Problem, it solved a mystery plaguing historians since World War II.

Richard Breitman and Alan Kraut identified Eduard Schulte as the man who told the Allies that Adolf Hitler planned to exterminate all Jews in territory held by the Germans.

Six million Jews were killed by the end of the war, most of them after Schulte warned the Allies. The Allies did not act on the information.

Schultes identity stumped historians for 42 years. Two authorities wrote lengthy articles suggesting it could be about 20 different people. Another claimed there was no such person.

My hats off to them, said Walter Lacquer, a Georgetown University history professor who spent years seeking the mans identity. For a time it seemed I had another candidate every week.

Breitman and Kraut say they became obsessed with the mystery in late 1982, while researching American refugee policy during the war.

The only man alive who knew the informants name was Gerhart Reigner, the representative of the World Jewish Congress in Geneva. He was 30 in July 1942 and the middle man between the informant and the U.S.

Reigner still feels bound by his promise of secrecy and will not reveal the mans identity, even though he is dead. But in recent years he has confirmed tidbits uncovered by historians.

Reigner has acknowledged that the informants last name began with an S, that he was a democrat who headed a business employing thousands of workers, and that he had reason to travel to Switzerland to meet his intelligence contacts.

Breitman and Kraut absorbed all previous evidence, including Lacquers list of candidates and Reigners clues, and took off in their own direction.

They studied the candidates individually, but none fit the mysterious messengers profile.

Businessman Hugo Stinnes, who was in Switzerland during the war but had relatives in Germany, looked promising. So did Hermann Schlosser, who owned a chemical firm. But Stinnes was not a democrat and Schlossers firm was too small for him to qualify as the employer of thousands of people.

We grew increasingly frustrated and perhaps discarded 10 more candidates, Breitman said. We were not aware we already had the answer in our possession.

Breitman said he had photocopied an unusually explicit description of the intelligence exploits of a German named Dr. Eduard Schulte;

The professors turned to a directory of German business executives published in 194H2. If Schulte were an important industrialist, he would be listed. The Library of Congress jcopy of the directory was missing and Breitman traveled to Harvards Widener Library, which still had its copy.

He discovered Shulte was managing direccor of a large mining concern with a Swiss subsidiary, and on the board of of seven other corporations.

We still did net have proof he delivered v;ord of the final solution,Breitman said.

- The key document was a letter written in September 1942 to a person with the initials E.S. It contained a coded message that the Nazis were deporting all Jews, except iron workers, to their deaths.

The chain of coincidences was piled too high, Kraut said. We were convinced.

When Lacquer heard of the discovery, he rushed to look at the documents himself. Im convinced, he said. They are absolutely correct.

Lacquer actually knew Schultes family from his hometown of Breslau, where the factory was located. His son and I went to the same school, Lacquer said.

Breslau is now Krakow, in southwest Poland. 'The historians believe Shultes mining company is now run by the 'Polish government.

Breitman and Kraut said they closed the case by looking through several thousand documents in an obscure annex of the archives in Suitland, Md.

Many of the documents we looked at were from legations and consulates and were not part of the central decimal file, Kraut said.

Some of the records were in such disorder that no scholars had bothered to go through them page by page, Breitman said.

Yet how significant is the discovery?

In the past, bombshell revelations have briefly fired the Hiblics imagination only to find a quiet resting place in the lalls of academia.

In his book The Fourth Man in 1979, Andrew Boyle identified Sir Anthony Blount as the British cabinet minister who led a four-member Soviet spy network during the 1950s and 1960s. The public always knew there was a fourth person, but not until Boyles book was his identity known.

And in the early 1960s, historian Vladimer Dedijer identified the colonel in the Serbian army who was connected to the Sarajevo assassination that triggered World War I. The assassins identity has always been known, but Dedijer was the first to prove the Serbian government was part of the conspiracy.    _

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In Paradise Valley, The Houses Reflect The Town

CANDLELIGHT TOUR - The lOth annual Old Wilmington by Candelight Tour is being beld from 4 to 9 p.m. today. Sponsored by the Lower Cape Fear Historical Society, proceeds

from the tour will be used for continuing historical projects. Tickets are priced at $8 per person. The tour will begin at the Latimer House. 126 South Third Street.

PARADISE VALLEY. Ariz. i.APi - The man who thought his $l4.00 front door would be the most expensive in town was in for a surprise - but his attitude is typical in this town. Paradise Valley building director Ben Thompson says.

Residents often set out to build a home that will stand out in sections where wealth is readily evident, and cost is no object when they do so. he says.

^For example, when Thompson told the man he knew of more expensive doors, the man returned later with a revised building plan.

It included a $27,000 front door.

In the prestigious Finisterre subdivision, where prices start at about SI million, one resident has a $14.000 "habitat room" - a place where people go if they would rather be somewhere else.

'if you would rather be sitting on the beach in California, you press a button and get sprayed with saltwater" while sitting under sunlamps, Thompson says. "If you would

rather be skiing in Colorado, you press another button and it snows on you. "

But. he added, building plans for a home in the La Place section include provisions for a habitat room that will cost S57.00U.

Thompson says something new and expensive usually pops up just after he thinks he has seen everything:

- A retired mortician has constructed a $14.000 phone booth next to his swimming pool in the Clearwater section. It's made of a custom coffin.

- A home on Mummy .Mountain has underwater stereo speakers.

- And a man who spends "a few weeks every year" at his home in La Place has invested $60.000 in a duck pond.

Lifestyles ol some town residents differ from those of most people. Thompson said. Attempts to contact the retired mortician, for example, were unsuccessful because he was outoftown-in.Spain

Toymaker Puts Emphasis On The Classics

By .MARY ESCH ' Associated Press Writer MIDDLE FALLS. N.Y. lAP) - While each Christmas brings a new hot-selling toy like E.T. or the Cabbage Patch dolls, a toymaker based in a converted chicken coop says he owes his success to such classic designs as a 19th century tabby cat and tb^ storybook Mr. Toad of Toad Hall.

"We try to stay out of the real fast lane of fad products. says John Gunther, president and co-founder of the Toy Works in this rural village 40 miles north of Albany. "We wanf to get a long life out of our designs since we put so much time and money into developing them.

Stuffed toys that are hand-printed and sewn bv a

staff of about 25 at the Toy Works are sold in retail outlets across the country and overseas. The Boston Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the Smithsonian Institute sell Toy Works beanbag dolls based on Kenneth Grahame's children's classic "The Wind in the Willows. including Mr. Toad, and Margery Williams' "The Velveteen Rabbit."

The storybook dolls were done at the request of publishers Holt, Reinhart & Winston and Alfred A. Knopf Inc., Gunther says. The toys, often sold along with the books, have been so successful that Gunther says he is considering a new line to accompany Knopf's Alice in Wonderland."

The Toy Works also makes

beanbag bats, pigs and cats based on the drawings of cartoonist Edward Gorey; silk-screened kitchen linens for Better Homes and Gardens; a Victorian rag doll created for Henri Bendel; and a hen and rooster inspired by the 5.0 chickens that clucked in one end of the coop when Gunther first set up shop nine years ago.

Other products nave, come and gone, such as a group of cats based on the cartoons of B.Kliban.

Of the company's almost too products, the most popular is the first one - a stuffed tabby c^t based on a I(K)-year-old design.

The cat was originally a three-piece design printed on cloth by Arnold Print Works of North Adams. Mass.. in 1892. and sold to home seam

stresses across the country. It started a craze for rag toys that evolved into more elaborate stuffed animals like Winnie the Pooh, Gunther says.

"It's really an old art form that we've resurrected," he says. "The tabby was a popular gift item too years ago. audit's still popular as a gift and with collectors to--day."

Gunther will not say how may tabby cats he has sold, except to say it is in the hundreds of thousands. But he says the business is growing every year.

A 35-year-old. selfdescribed "T-shirt e.xecu-tive." Gunther takes pride in the quality of work done by the artists in the long, white chicken house ai ihe lormer White Feather F arm.

"Our tone is textile print

ing," he says. "We produce realistic images on fabric probably better than anyone else. We do all the work here, all by hand. That way we have control over all the steps, which gives us a big advantage,"

The dolls made at the Toy Works are first drawn in full color by staff or commissioned artists. A staff artist then makes separate black-and-white tracings of each color in the drawing -the color separations from which silk screens are made. A doll's hair. for example, may need four color separations - black, brown, red and yellow - to give it realistic highlights.

"You can do color separations with computers now." says Gunther. "But it's super-expensive and not as

good - you don't get the fine tones ot color you do when an artist is making the interpretation.

"We put a lot more work into color separations than other printers are willing to do." he says. ".Most silk-screen printing is what I call comic-book style - blocks of color. We have,color gradations, This is the only place I know of ffiat does true halftones on fabric."

With all this attention to detail, the toys are not cheap. Retail prices range from S7,.5U for a 6-inch Edward Gorey cat to $28 for the 21-inch Henri Bendel Henrietta doll dressed in an eyelet lace-trimmed calico dress. The lovs are aiso available in sew-ii-vourself kits at reduced prices.

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Saturday Daytime

SOAP OPERA WEEK

Gower St., Los Angel 90028.

S.^ OAU In ne Family SEagleiNat Night Tracks iM (HBO) ^r|deo Jakeboi Christmas SJIONews a To Be Aannmced (ESPN)SportsWeek(R) tM e The Blackwood Brothers OSNews X Jmny Swaggart O Little Hoae Ob The Prairie iKaagaroo

_ ZeiaLeTitt

(SPN) HoTie The .Nut Farm (ISIS)

(BSPN)ladePoothaU(R)

(HBO) Movie Table For Five" (1913)

Ul (SHOW) Dot And SaaU Oaas S Jimmy SoatOB Onldoon O Woody Woodpecker e Great Space OoBster HBPinMAdsciiinnr

(E9*N) Rmwade Review (R) 7rNBWeekewdGardeaer BPmtSReports X VcffetahleSoiip OeCartooas SABetterWay QCaptajaKaagiroo Kidnearid aJimBMtker SGED

(NKDPiawheei

(USA)AliveABdWeO!

7.d5 O Between The Lines 7:130 Rocky And Friends 7:M O Athletes In Actkn OOTheJetaoos XNewiUi B Treehoose anb B Benji, Zax And The Alien Prince SGED 7:330 Romper Room KMBSnpertwok O 0 Scooby Doo / Menudo XTbeJetsoos O B The Flintstone Funnies OOTheBiakitts S Mr. Mnstache And Company S Inside Business Today (SPN) Post Time (SHOW) A Better Place (ESPN)SportsCenter (HBO) Itovie Breaker Morant" (1980)

(USA) Scholastic Sports Academy

3:05 O Starcade 8:13 (ESPN) Instnctiooal Series 1:30 B Flying House B 0 The Monchhicfais / Little Rascals / Richie Rich

(USA) Golf Tips From The Proa 1:33 B Movie "Angel And The Badman"(1947)

9:00 B James RoMson X Incredible Balk BBSmarfsg S Circle Sqaart O BUI Band 's QaeM (SPN) CraftsNHiiys (ESPN) Motorcycle Radi (USA)Oo-Bd l:30BneLewm O 0 e Pac^Man / Rabik Cabe/Menado 0 9 Oungeoaa And Dragons OlaMdeTrack (SPN) Sewi^ With Nancy (USA) Woman Watch

IHOBQscoKid X Six Millioa Dollar Man OBPIastkman B Jimmy Swagprt (SPN) American Baby (SHOW) Movie Forever Dar-

HBgfTfwOr-

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(HBO)lndeneNFL (USA) Scholastic Sports Academy

10;38B Movie "Last Sugecoacfa West" (1957)

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10:339 Movie The Bridge On The River Kwai "( 1957)

11:000 0 9 Puppy / Scooby Doo/Schoolbouae Rock X Movie Showdown ' (1973) 0OMr.T

O Benji, Zu And The Alien Prince

BSoul Train BJimBakker S Dinner At Julias (ESPN)SportsWeek(R)

(HBO) Movie "Absence Of Malice" (1981)

(NICK) Kids Writes

(USA) Sports Look nOAmi

X Tom And Jerry aiirtTal

OB The Shirt Tales O 9 Saturday Supercade Contact

B Bradshaw On The Eight Stages Of Man

(SPN) Jimmy Houston Ontdoon (SHOW) Bonnie Scotland (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R)

11:30 O B Amang Spider-Man / Incredible Hulk O Bugs Bonny / Road Runner World Of Cooking (SPN)TheAPUy (ESPN) Alpine SU School (NICK) The Tomorrow People (USA) Pick The Pros ISdO B The Westerners O Lome Greenes New Wilder-

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(SHOW) Movie Dragonslayer" (1981)

(ESPN) Tennis

(NICK) Yon Cani Do That On Television

(USA) Countdown To 84; Sarajevo And Los Angdes 13:300 Wild BUI mckok O Wrestling

0 9 American Bandstand O Rocky And Friends BThundarr OBNFLFootbaU B Sign Of The Times S lisoTstiac

(NICK) Standby... LighiA* Camera! Actk!

(USA) You: Magaiine For Worn-

ATWr changes; A Loving Danelle

1:08 B Movie "Operation Hay-lift'(1950)

X Movie " Master Touch " (1974)

O Congreasman Chailie Roae

Tff *niii1 ^ilwiwfrin

B Father John Bertolucci 6 WaU Street Week (SPN) Name Of The Game Is Golf

(HBO) Movie The Sign Of Four" (1982)

By Kimberly Redmond What has Frank Grant, who starred on All My Children," done since he was killed off that soap. Also, will David Hasselhoff ever return to "The Young and the Restless? - D.M., New Castle, Pa.

John Danelle. who played Frank Grant, is now appearing on "Loving"' as police detective Art Hindman. Its doubtful that Hasselhoff will return to Y&R." where he played Snapper Foster, since

Rider." is a huge success

(USA) Desi|n For Living 1:808 09 NCAA FootbaU O ACC Sports Center B Christian ChUdren's Fund B Heritage U.S.A. Update B Intematiooal Editiaa (SK^PfesisgrapbefsEye (NICK) Going Great (USA) Scholastk Sports Acad^ my

3:000 Dont Let It Happen To TheChildreo BNewGenentioo 9 Movie "The Lusty Men (1952)

Joy Junction

ffi Doctor Who

(SPN) Personal Computer

(SHOW) A Better Place

(ESPN) PGA Golf

(NICK) The Adventures Of

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(USA) Movie '"Loophole (1981) 2:30 eCaU Of The West O Wrestling

(SPN) Companion Dog Training (SHOW) Movie Love At First Bite (1979)

(NICK) Livewire 3:00 B Movie Rolling (Caravans" (1938)

X Movie The Brain (1969)

O Dance Fever B Pirate Adventures (SPN) Financial Inquiry (HBO) Kenny Loggha S:3000NFL83 B American Adventure (SPN) Scuba World (NICK) Special DeUvery 8:43 09 NCAA BasketbaU

Although it has been an on-again. off-again romance, Hasselhoff is engaged to "Capitors " newest cast member, Cathy Hickland. who portrays Julie McCandless.

Ive watched "As The World Turns since 1957, but since the latest writers have taken over, the show has become unrecogBiiabie. Why did they get rid of ail the people who made the show what it was? As far as Im concerned they might as wcii hsvc canceled ATWT. J.A., Perryton, Texas.

-Whenever there are

David Hasselhoff

4:00 O Wyatt Earp OONn>Footbi

__ .FootbiU BFTLCInbfSpaniah) SQMltini

(SPN) Mediterranean Echoea (ESPN) California Bowl (HBO) Movie Table For Five (1983)

(USA) Time Out Theatre 4:300 Wagon Train O Joy Of Woodworking 0A.C.C. Sports Center 9 College BaiketbaU S3 -.14: Playboy All-America Team Almanac

(SHOW) An Audience With Mel Brooks

(NICK) You Cant Do That On Televisioo 4:33 9 High Chaparral

headwriter or producer changes, the soap in question will undoubtedly undergo cast and story line changes. To express your opinion about ATWT you can write to the shows writer or producer at CBS-TV, 51 W. 52nd St.. New York. NY 10019.

3.^0 O 9 Wide World Of Sports

XSoollYain a Heritage U.SA Update BWoodwrigbtsShop (NICK) Against The Od(b (USA) Co-Ed 3.3012) I/yweZl t j^*yjftrtnn SAU New ThM Old Hone (SHOW) US Festival83: Day 3 (NICK) Reggie Jacksons World Of Sports (USA) Radio 1990 3:35 9 Motorweek Dlustrated

Can you tell me anything about Bianca Fergusons (Claudia Phillips on General Hospital) cosmetics business? D.W., Fremont, Calif.

Miss Fergiton does have a line of natural cosmetics, you can write to her in care of "General Hospital, " 1438 No.

Ive been studying a< Philadelphia and Ne and would like to knon can tell me how to cont people who cast foi opera roles. F.L water Park, N.J.

You can send your graph and resume to'th ing directors listed c credits that appear at tl of each soap.

(Have a questiak aboti operas? Write Kimber moad at 200 Park A Roora S02, New Yori I01S6.)

Fleeing from the threat of evaporation and a villainoi magician. Frosty beads for the North Pole, accompj nied by his little friend, Karen, in Frosty th Snowman, an animated musical special to be rebroac cast Wednesday, Dec. 14 on CBS.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,19B3 g-g

OUTDOORS

With

JoeAIbea

Bear Grass Rallies By Jamesville

I Sportsman's Stamp Prints ^railable - Prints of North ^rolina's 1983 SjMrtsman's 9amp are now available. The phnt was done by well-known vfijdlife artist Duane Raver, v(ho served for many years as Mtor of Wildlife in North (Molina maiaziner^

The image-size of the prints U"6'2 inches by nine inches, atid orders for (his time-limited edition will be accepted through March 31.1984.

cost of the prints is $90. Also, sportsmans stamps Which are not sold by June 30, 1M4, will be available, to collectors for $7.50 each.

This print of North Caro-Iftias first sportsmans stamp i^ expected to appreciate in \^lue consideraDly. and a royalty from the sale of each print will be donated tot the wildlife commission and used f6r wildlife conservation. TJiese prints are not being sold h^f the commission, but are available from art dealers throughout North Carolina. ISpecial bfier For North Carolina Wildlife Calendars -\fildlife art enthusiasts are in lock - for $5. they may obtain copies fo both the 198^83 and lte3-84 North Carolina Wildlife ilendars. These calendars feature a beautiful series of v^ldlife art prints and have been very popular with collectors and hobbyists who fame or use the prints in cjafts projects. Artists fttured in the calendars include Bob Binks, Bob Dance, (icil Eakins, Larry Barton, IJiane Raver. Lee LeBlanc. 5ob Timberlake. Sally lijiddletonand Don Balke.

The calendars were produced by the Chairmans Wildlife Advisory Committee. al group of North Carolina cpnservation leaders who hove been appointed by the chairman of the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Q)mmission to provide information. guidance and support for agency conservation programs. Proceeds from the calendars will be used for tllese purposes. jThese calendars have been tiemendously popular and are

beautiful additions to anyones home or office, said George Mason, chairman of the chairman's wildlife advisory committee, They also make fine Christmas gifts. There is a limited quantity left, so were offering both calendars for the price of one. The calendars will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis until the supply is exhausted. Calendars may be ordered by sending $5 to the Chairmans Wildlife Advisory Committee, c/o George Mason, P.O. Box 473. Dallas, N.C. 28034, Checks should be made payable to the Chairmans Wildlife Advisory Committee.

Spotlighting Regulation Change A change has been made in spotlighting regulations in Hyde County. The change prohibits the shining of lights in areas frequented by deer between one-half hour after sunset and one-half hour before sunrise in Hyde County within the following boundaries:

North - a line running parallel and 1,000 yards north from that part of SR 1304 that leads from Hodges Fork to Rose Bay East - the Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge boundary Southeast - U.S. 264 West and Southwest - a line running parallel with and 1,000 yards west-southwest from the center line of SR 1304.

In the rest of Hyde County, current regulations prohibiting spotlighting between 11 p.m. and one-half hour before sunrise will continue to apply.

BEAR GRASS - Bear Grass High School rallied in the final quarter and gained a 59-55 victory over Jamesville Friday night in the opening game of the season for both teams.

It was also the opening Tobacco Belt Conference games for the two.

. In the girls game, Bear Grass took a 39-17 win.

The Bears inched out into a 16-12 lead in the first quarter of the boys contest, but couldnt really pull away. Jamesville came back and

held thinK close, matching points with the Bears in the second period. That left Bear Grass with a 30-26 halftime edge.

The Bullets' took command of the basketball game in the third period, outscoring the Bears, 16-6 to push out into a 42-36 lead. But the Bears were not to be denied, rallying for a 23-13 edge that pulled out the victory.

Lawrence Watson led the Bears with 22 points vlle James Williams had 13 and Darryl Brown added 10.

Jamesville was paced by Robert Harris with 16.

Cindy Taylor led Bear Grass wit 10 points, while no one hit

The Bear Grass girls inched ahead, 9-8, after one period of play in their game, then zoomed away from Jamesville in the second period. An 18-4 margin ran the Bears out to a 27-12 lead at the half. The action slowed in the period, but the Lady Bears still added to the lead, moving it to 31-13. They outhit the Lady Bullets, 8-4, in the final quarter to wrap it up.

JV Game: Bear Grass 41. Jamesville:

(iirlsGame Jamesville (17)

Gardner 2 1-1 5. Reason 0 2-2 2. Getchill 2 0-1 4. Lilly 1 0-0 2, K. Brown 0 0-2 0, Price 1 0-0 2. S. Brown 0 2-4 2, Crisp 0 0-0 0. Perrv 0 0-00. Totals.VKI IT.

Bear Grass (IW)

Knox 3 1-2 7,, Rodgerson 2 3-3 7, thirHLillv 2 4-8 8. Cowen 0 3-3 3, C Taylor -4 3-:i 10. Harrison 1 0-0 2, L Tavlor 0 2-2 2. Land 0 0-0 0, Bell 0 ()-0 0, Mizelle 0 0-0 0, Lawrence 0 0-0 0. Alston 00-00. Totals 12 1.7-23 :i!t.

Jamesville..............8    I    1 t17

Bear Grass..............!i    IX    I h3!l

1n double figures'for Jamesville.

The Bear boys are now i-O while the girls are 2-0.

JamesviHe's teams are 0-1. Bear Grass travels to Columbia on Tuesday, while the Bullets plavhost to .Aurora.

Chocowinity Rolls By Columbia, 65-44

CHOCOWINITY - Mark Smith, Terry Moore and Reg-, gie Ross pumped in 14 points each to lead Chocowinity to a 65-44 victory over Columbia Friday in high school 1-A basketball action.

Kim Green fired in 17 points and Rhonda Mizelle added 12 as the Lady Indians defeated Columbia 63-43. Tasha Clegg led Columbia with 15 points.

Andre Bailey paced Col-

with

umbia with 12 points, Harold Hill adding 10.

Chocowinity, now 2-1 on the season, opened a 30-21 lead in the first half and shut down Columbia in the second.

Chocowinity hosts Belhaven Tuesday.

Nance Inks With Suns

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - Phoenix Suns forward Larry Nance signed a new 5'2-year contract Friday worth an estimated $4.4 million, making him the highest-paid player on the National Basketball Association team, club officials said,

Its a good deal, Nance said. "I was hoping things would work out. I want to stay here. 1 feel comfortable with this team.

The 6-foot-lO Nance was the Suns first-round draft pick out of Clemson in 1981. He had 1>2 years remaining on a four-year contract he signed as a rookie for $180,000 per year.

Herb Rudoy, Nances Chicago-based attorney, said the new pact couples the remaining V > years with a new four-year deal and pays his client some $800,000 per season.

LOUS CAREER FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) - Smiling Lou Holtz, the head football coach at Arkansas, is one of the fastest coaches in the country at the difficult art of tossing off one-liners.

" Holtz began at Arkansas in 1977 after making several other stops. He had his first head coaching alignment at William and Mry in 1969.

December Specials On

sr/Ht

Chainsaws

Stihl 041 Farm Boss with 20" bar

*393 Ayden Sport Shop

312 East Avt., Ayden

WRAPUP AGREATDEAL

Now through Christmas, celebrate Honda Holidays with us.

Checkout the special holiday prices were offering on selected 1983Hondas.

1983XL100S $825

FREE!

Get a 1984 Honda Championship Racing Calendar freef Enterour weekly drawings to win valuable Hondaline prizes.

And stock up on the Hondaline accessories and apparel we carry.

Happy Honda Holidays.

HO

lYS

HONDA/SUZUKI

Of Greenville

918 N. Memorial Dr. 758-3084

HOnmAUMEr

WINTHIUPRIZISI

3 U-16, Manner 0 0-2 0. D. Clegg 1 0-0 2. Totals 203-10 43.

Choeowinit\ (ti3>

Boys Game Jamesville (..))

Ange 2 4-4 8, Harris 8 0-210. Peele 4 0-0 8. Biggs 3 1-0 7. Slolesburv 3 0-0 6. T Perry 1 0-0 2, K, Perry 1 0-0 2, Brown 0 2-2 2. Hardison 1 o-o 2. Bowen 0 2-2 2. Anthony o o-o o, Lilh

00-00, Totals 23 0-10 Bear Grass (501

T. Williams 0 3-.7 3. G Brown 1 3-4 5, D, Brown 4 2-4 10; J Williams 0

1-2 13. Watson 8 0 12 22. Pullord 1 o-2 2. Ti. Brown 1 0-0 2, Te Broun O 2-2 2.ShepardOO-OO.Totals2l 17-31 r.o. Jamesville 12 II IK 13.>,>

-Bear (irass... IK il K -2:!^.>0

Mizelle 4 4-7 12, Green 7 3-4 17. Gibbs 3 2-3 8. Congleton 3 0-2 6, Elks 7 I-IO15, Z. Warren 0 0-1 0. Gerald 0 1-51. D. Warren 0 0-1 0, Harvev 2 0-0 4, Moore 00-10, Totals 2K ll-:i4K3.

Columbia............13    K    S    IK13

Chocowinitv........IK    IK    t.5    IKK3

Alumni-GCA Split Games

JV Game: Columbia 86, Chocowinity 37

Girls Game Columbia (43)

Lee 3 0-0 6. Simpson 3 2-2 8, T. Clegg 7 1-5 15, White 3 0-0 6. Hassell

Boys Game Columbia Itti

Respess 2 4-4 8. Bailey 5 2-3 12, Mc.Nair 21-2 5. Hill 5 0-1 10. .Norman 1 L2 3, Wrighton 1 1-2 3. Spencer 1

0-2 2i Hargrove Oil 1 Totals 17 10-1714.

Cbocowinitv (K5)

Smith 7 0-0 14. Te Moore 7 0-0 14, Ross 7 0-1 14, Tripp 2 0-0 4, Harris 2

1-2 5, Tyree 1 2-4 4. Ty .Moore 2 O-o 4, Waters 0 1-2 1, Hooker 1 0-3 2. Garris 0 1-1 1, Harding 1 0-0 2 Totals ;!0.5-i;( 65.

Columbia............13    H    K 1711

Chocowinitv........IK    II    !i 2K-K.)

Greenville Christian held its annual alumni-varsity basketball games Friday night - with mixed success.

The varsity girls topped the alumni. 36-8.'in its contest, but the boys' varsity fell to the alumni, 79-66.

The Knights return to the interscholastic - wars next Friday night, playing host to Friendship (!!hristian Academy.

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Kero-Sun is number one in kerosene neater sales and service in fact, Kero Sun pioneered the new generation of kerosene heaters in America, and already counts its owners in the millions.

A key reason for this success is simply value for the money. For example, an advanced technology Kero-Sun portable heater is 99.9% fuel-efficient. And costs just pennies per hour to run.

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KE

Warrens Farm Supply

Hwy.903 Stokes, N.C. 75B-A57B

WE BRING COMFORT TQ iNNER SPACE

SMART BUYS FOR

SMART SHOPPERS

Weve checked every tire we have in inventory. We ve contacted our Goodyear warehouse. And what Weve come up

with is a collection of very special values - ail of them sale priced, if you need tires, this is the time to buy.

While supplies last

AS SEEN ON TV

ARRIVA RADIALS FOR IMPORTS Gas-saving steel belted radial ply construction

39

P155 80R12 Blackwall Plus $1 41 FET No Hade needed

Blackwall

Size

SALE

PRICE

P145'80R13

$45.00

P155.80R13

$47 00

P185/80R14

$57,50

P165'80R15

$51.25

STEEL RADIALS

CUSTOM POLYSTEEL RADIALS Keeps Its feet even in the rain

Plus $1 38 to $1 91 FET No trade needed

P155/80R3 Whitewall Plus $1 50 FET No trade needed

Whitewall

Size

SALE

PRICE

P195 75R14 ^

$62.50

P205 75R14 "

$64.00

P205 75R15

$67.50

P2T5 75R15

$69 50

No trade needed

I

SALE *3

SALE'4

SALE'S

I WHITE LETTER PERFECT    FOR OLDER CARS

FOR LIGHT TRUCKS, VANS, CAMPERS AND 4WDs

EAGLE ST RADIAL Road-gripping design with white letter sidewall

56

P185/70R13 White Letter Plus $1 95 FET No trade needed

White Letter Size

SALE

PRICE

P195/70R14

$73.00

P215/70R14

$79.55

P225/70R15

$83.45

P245/60R15

$89.35

Plus $1 95 to $2 89 FET No trade needed

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

POWER STREAK II A great choice for-cars not suited for radials

28

A78 X 13 Blackball Plus SI 44 FET No Hade needed

Blackwall | Size

SALE

PRICE

B78X13 1

$31.90

E78X 14

$37.00

G78X 15

541.60 _

H78X 15

$43.45

Plus $1 54 to $2 55 FET No trade needed

Every Goodyear Light Truck Tire is now on sale, including all Wrangler tires There are steel belted apd all season radials to choose from, plus a wide range of sidewall styles.

I

LAST DAY TO SAVE: SAT..

DDO DOO 0

M. MIHNDI

NEW! Cndit card conven/anca tor automotive naada. Sign up now at your naarby Goodyear

retallar. Use The Silver Card nationwide at participating Goodyear retail outlets. Enjoy credit convenience whenever you travel.

Watch the 1984 Winter Olympics on ABC TV, brought to you by Goodyear.

In addition to The Suvpr Card vou may also    V,

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Two Locations In Greenville 729 Dickinson Ave. Phone 752-4417 West End Store Phone 756-9371 Locations Also In Rocky Mount & Tarboro

(





-r

Computer Garnet

Mission Impossible, Voodoo Castle or

cQrtrldgej

13(1-12)





Typewriters and telephones not in Ashland Shelby, Willamaon

SAVE Mo

Electric II with keyboard correction

n6Qu!ar $213.33

179

99

Power carriage return and shift Power repeat keys and pre-set tabulator. Power space bar. Pica style type. .    -

34046

Magnovox telephone clock-AM/FM radio

Reg. $69.99

With modular plug-in jacK Adjustable volume speaker    ^    Q99

for conference calls. More.    "T    w

$49 99 Magnavox clock radio phone 34045.......39.99

Trimline rotary phone \

Reg. $49.99

Choose wall-mount or desk model at this 0099 low price!

Sporting Goods not available in Ashland or Williamson

Exercise equipment requires some assembly

SAVE *50

Leg-lift weight bench and weights

700-lb. capacity bench (user plus weights) has 5-position incline back, institutional type leg lift 177-lb weight set with 16 plates, 72-in. barbell, two dumbbell bars

Regular sep. prices total $169.98

119* SAVE *3

Wilson Warm-ups for men or women

Reg. $27.99

24

Pants and jacket in a choice of colora

SAVE *40

Wheel cycle

Reg.    00^^

$139.99    ^ *

All-steel welded frame. Speedometer/odometer, dual adjustable handte-bara

Regular separate prices total.

Rods and reels

1Q74

YOUR CHOICE ^ $39.49* splncast or $35.47* 'spinning outfit_

SAVE *30-*40

SAVE *30.*35

on 10-speed Tourney'J^ 26-in. racing bikes

Regular $134.99

99

99

Features include 10-speed standard derailleur. stem-mounted shift levers and steel caliper brakes.

24-in Regular $129.99 .......99.99

SAVE *30

on this rugged 20-in. BMX bike

Regular $129.99

99

99

FS200 BMX with reinforced steel frame. Rear coaster brakea BMX-style pada

SAVE *30

Brittany 3-speed bikes

Regular $169.99

139

99

24-ia or 26-in. models for men and womea Steel frame with Black Cherry finish. Rear coaster brakea Save $30.

Bikes partially assembled.

Bikes not available in Williamson.

Ask about Sears Credit Plan









&

wi|<?*6<raWnKB

\4' /%

&i

r-^

17(M, 7-8,12)





The 50 and over do-lt-yoaisdf kit

If you're 50 or over, you're eligible to join the 14,000,000 Americans who are eiyoying the services, and savings of AARP, the American Association of Retired Persons.

AARP believes in the dignity and self-sufficien<^ ci older Americans. And your AARP membership will help you attain these gc^s in so many ways, it's hard to believe it costs only ^.00. Just take a look at this list:

You can make new fiiends and get involved in your community by joining one of over 3,300 local AARP Chapters.

You'll be eligible to sign up for AARFs group health insurance plans specially tailored to your

needs.____

You can save on dru^ and pharmaceutical supplies through our nonprofit Pharmacy Service.

You can receive substantial discounts on Hertz, Avis, and National car rentals, as well as at most major hotel and motel chains

across the country.

You can join the specially designed, specially priced AARP Motoring Plan.

Youll receive the beautifully produced bimonthly Modem Maturity Magazine, as well as the monthly AARP News Bidletin to keep you up to date with news and information affecting you.

You are eligible to participate m the Association's money market fund, a chance to earn attractive yields on your savings.

Youll receive absolutely free, weU-written, comprehensive guides to just about every fecet oflifeover50.

You'll be adding your voice to

the millions of others we represent wherever and whenever government addresses the needs of those over 50.

And there's more.

All for $5.00 a year, which includes membership for your spouse. So why not start receiving the many benefits of AARP membership today? i&id why not show this ad to a friend who may not have heard of AARP.

Joining AARP could be one of the best things you ever do for yourself.

AARP

I am 50 or older. Please enroO me as a memba*of AARP. One membership makes both member and spouse ebg3)ie far aD AARP benefits. Enctos] find;

(one year dues)

$12.50 (3 year dues)

135.00(10 year dues)

BiDmelater.

Blake dieck or money order PRyaUe to AARP DONOTSENDCASH

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PERSONS

215 Long Beach Blvd. Long Beach, CA 90801

Name

A/Unaec

Apt *

Zip-

Rirthdate

55% of dues is designated for Association publications. Dues outside U.S. dwnestic mail bmits: $7/1 year, 118/3 years. Please allow 3 to 6 weeks for delivery of your membership kit.

KTAB I





One-button color adjusts AFC, color, tint brightness, contrast

Quarts precision electronic tuner accurateiy pulls in signals

Super Chromix* black matrix picture tube for bright natural color.

SAVE M 20

on TV with quartz tuner

Surprise someone this Christmas with this big-screen color TV from Sears! Channel Touch selection systera Digital channel indicator. 19-in. diag. mea& picture... large enough for family viewing. Sale ends Dec. 24.

Reg. $499.99

379

99

Record favorite programs on VCR's from Sears

A. 3-day/1-program.    Fonvard,

reverse BetaScan picture search. Pause functioa

with dual cassette decks for dubbing

Reg. $299.99. Play your favorite 8-track tapes, too! Electronic digital frequency readout Full-size record player. Two airsuspension speakers Ideal gift for studental Sale ends December 31.

99

9272

199

1/2 PRICE mini hi-fi

Reg $399.99. Cassette play/ record. Pair of 2-way speakers. Saie ends Dec 31.

21941

99

$SOOFFAM/FMitwM

Reg. $149.99. Cassette play/ record. Tone control Saie ends Dec 24.

21571

399'

Dec 24

$150 OFF!

Tabletop color TV

with precise quartz

electronic tuning

Reg. $549.99. Big 19-ia diag mea& picture.

II..I

Batteries extra

19Ln

Sound gift ideas $24.99 cassette recordei*,

$29.99 stereo cassette player or $49.99 clock radio Sale ends Dec 17 on recorder Others end on Dec 24

Reg. $499.99 Sale ends Dec 31

*349

a Save $100 on VMS VCR 10-day/1-prograta Remote coa troL Visual search. Reg $549.99.

Sears VCR's are designed for personal In-home viewing, not lor usage that Might violate copyright laws

Sale ends Dec 24

449

Video Cassette Recorder Tapes

3-hr. Beta cassette tape. 6-hr.VHS cassette tape.

..8.99

.10.99

229

$l10OFFpo>tabb1V

Reg $339.99 Super Chromix* picture tube. 13-ia diag mea& pictura Sale ends Dec 24.

99

Go-anywhere TV

5-ia diagonal measure pictura Hurry, while quantities last!

79

$M0FF8ladi/whit*1V

Reg price was $129.99 In Jaa '83.12-ia diag meaa pictura SaleendaDac31. ^

No monthly payment on home appliances until February on Sears Deferred Credit Plaa (There will be a finance charge for the deferral pariodi)

If 10Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised

6:12-11





r [

1XS YOUR BRAIN MIND BHNf. I )SF.n?

TRUE OR FALSE?

1. Most people want to live as long as possible.

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your body and lead to nervous exhaustion.

3. Women tend to be better providers of emotional support than men.

4. Your brain is tike any delicately ^ructured, highly sensitive a^iparatus: The more you use it, the sooner it will wear out.

5. The aging process can be slowed down.

ANSWERS

1. True. Fifty-six percent of the adults who responded to a York University (Canada) survey stated that th^ want to live pa the age of 75, while 23 percent dumiicu th^' dont Want to live lonar than 75 years. Although most said they would prefer to outlive their spouse, some said they fear they would be lonely Vithout their mate.

2. False. University of Michigan studies indicated that social relationships can make a person healthier. The researchers said that the social support most people receive from marriage, friends and belonmng to organizations meets the basic, human need for meaningful relationships. (Men find marria^ to be a more supportive relationship, while women benefit more from contact with friends.) Sudi support enables individuals to share their triumphs and defeats with others, therey reducing any stress they may encounter at work or elsewhere. Relief from stress contributes to good health and mental well-being.

S. True A Rochester University stiKty found that both men and women benefit more from interaction wfrh women than interaction with men. Women tend to reduce feelings of loneliness for both sexes, perhaps, according to the researchers, because they seem to be irore open, empathetic, sockv^notion-ally skilled and thus better provid^ of emotional support.

4. False. University of California studies indicated that the more you think and stimulate your brain with challenging problems, the longer the mental aging pro^ is likely to be delayed. T^e brain s ability to think, reason and acquire new knowledge tends to deteriorate with lack of use, much like a muscle that is seldom exerdsed.

5. Thie According to studies conducted at New Orleanss Oschner (3inic, its possible to control your aging process, but it does require some work. By ^erasing regularly, you can slow down the aging process, especially if you enjoy the acUvity; lack of exercise hastens the process. Purdue University researchers found that physical fitness achieved by exercise that wu enjoy not only increases the bodys physical abilities, it also improves morale and restores sdf-confidice. IW

12 Famlv Weekly ogceuber 11 igsa





Price ^ 9x9x%**dioppln9lloek^ 5 m

'Price

OtfiKllmewttiqy^Mttet

Hem DeligM Peek

Seafood trKicks. cheese, wafers.

..





80 OFF

(. f M.n, IdMM Mt DwuDkM........IS.ft

$69.99, Compact Vac, model #6097, thru Dec 24 ......... 49.99

Give her a 6-stitch free-arm sew

159

99

Reg. $239.99

Color-coded dials let you select 6 built-in stitches: 4 utility and 2 stretch stitches. This machine features Ultra-Stitch for balanced stitches even on stretch materiala Built-in bar-tack buttonholer for great buttonholes. Converts for flatbed sewing. Sale ends December 24.

$59.99, Cart for microwave, model 84101, thru Dec 24 ........ 49.99

SAVE M 20

Microwave oven with probe

279

Reg. $399.99    J/m    M    M

Surprise mom with a microwave Christmas morningshe can use it to cook a Christmas feast that day! Features automatic hold/warm to help keep food warm up to one hour after temperature Is reached. Electronic touch controls, digital display and morel. Sale ends December 17.

SAVE $10

SAVE $30

62372

|99    Sale ends

Dec. 31

Kwik-Sweep vac Reg. $49.99.2 speeda Ideal for quick joba Hangs for easy storaga $59.99 3-spee(jl$49m

79

32601

99    Sale ends

Dec 24

Upright vac

Reg. $109.99. Strong suction; beater-bar brush. Edge clean; 4 heighta Cord storage.

SAVE $70

72331

Sale ends Dec. 31

22832

1 C099 Sale ends I d# Dec24

2.0 peak HP vac

Reg. $229.99. Powerful suction (.70 HP VCMA); beater-bar brush. 3 carpet pile heighta

$100-$150 OFF OQQ99 92631

W m M Your choice

30-in. ranges

Choose Kenmore gas or electric range. White. Reg. $499.99, gas range Reg. $549.99, electric

88641

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Pqwkns, Meagher

Lead Duke By ECU

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor DURHAM - Ledty Johnny Dawkins 19 points and Dan Meaghers 18, the Duke Blue Devils held off an East Carolina rally in the second half and cruised to an 80^ basketball victory last night in Cameron Indoor Stadium.

The victory was the sixth straight for the unbeaten Blue Devils, while the Pirates fell away to 2-2.

Duke shot out to an early lead, building it to as much as 21 in the first half and to an early 26-point spread in the second before ECU pounded back, cutting it to 13.

Duke did an excellent job of defense in the first seven or ei^t minutes, ECU Coach Charlie Harrison said. They scouted us well, and they did what they had to do. Dukes kids have really, really matured since last year.

Harrison, who starts three freshmen and at one time had four frosh and a sophomore on the floor, compared his young team to Dukes of last year. We lost a lot of experience last year, and our kids are hesitant, but what a wonderful difference a year makes. Look at Duke last year.

Both coaches admitted that Dukes second half was not all that well played, but both gave credit to the Pirates for hanging in there. Theres a difference in getting beat and losing, Harrison said. Tonight we got beat. We tried, we didnt always do things right, but we never quit.

The Blue Devils came out red hot, pushing through the first six points of the game during the first minute while the Pirates were stili trying to find their way up and down the court. Over the first five minutes, the Blue Devils used the foul line to great advantage, scoring eight of

their first 20 points there, building up a 20-8 lead. A streak of eight points, which ended on a David Henderson dunk with 12:09 showing, made it 28-12.

Three minutes later, ECU guard Tony Robinson was called for his third personal foul and also drew a technical, resulting in a five-point play for the Blue Devils, running their lead out to 33-14. Seconds later Meagher hit on a turnaround jumper for a 35-14 lead, the biggest of the half.

East Carolina finally found its legs then, and ran off eight straight, four each by Bruce Peartree and Barry Wright. That was ended by a Dawkins jumper from the lane.

The Pirates later came up with five in a row, all by Wright that cut the lead to 41-29 before Duke reeled off nine straight - including a four-pointer on another technical, this one on Wright.

That pushed Duke back into its 21-point spread at the half, 52-31.

Led by six points by Dawkins, the Blue Devils pushed the lead out to 25 at 60-35 Juring the first five minutes of the second half, and the lead reached its apex on a Tommy Amaker jumper at .64-38 with 13:26 to go.

The Pirates then seemed to reach inside and finally find the strength to make a comeback. Over the next eight minutes, the Pirates, led by five points from Derrick Battle, outscored Duke, 17-4, cutting the lead in half, 68-55.

But with 2:52 to go, Amacker hit again and Henderson made two free throws, followed by a Meagher throw-back that made it 78-58, ending any hopes the Pirates might have had.

Both Jay Bilas and Amaker iinished with 12 points for Duke.

The Pirates were led by Wright with 17 while Battle tossed in 15, his best of the

year. Robinson added 11.

Duke actually won the game at the foul line hitting 28 of 36, while ECU made 12 of 17. Both hit 26 field goals. Duke outrebounded ECU 35-28, but most of that came in the first half.

Turnovers also hurt the Pirates, who committed 28, but Duke also had its share with 23.

The Pirates have a week off before returning to the courts, when they host Drexel next Saturday in Minges Col-

iseum.

East Carolina (64) MP FG FT

Rb

F A P

Gilchrist

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

Vanderhorst

21

0-0

0-0

2

3

2

0

Robinson

28

3-6

5-5

1

4

2

11

Sledge

5

0-3

0-0

0

0

0

0

Wright

33

7-12

3-6

4

5

3

17

Turnbill

19

2-4

0-0

3

1

0

4

Battle

26

7-10

1-1

4

3

0

15

Grady_________

- 12.

2.7-

.1.-2..

.3,.

.2.

.0..

Smith

18

3-6

OA)

4

5

0

6

Bass

8

0-1

(H)

0

1

0

0

Peartree

19

1-6

2-2

3

3

3

4

Harris

9

1-2

0-1

1

1

0

2

Reicheneker

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

Team

Totals

200 26;57

12-17

3

28 28 10

64

Amaker

Duke (80) 26 5-7

2-2

3

4

1

12

McNeely

20

0-2

4-4

1

2

1

4

Henderson

21

2-4

2-2

3

4

0

6

Crump

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

Bilas

28

3-10

6-6

5

0

0

12

Ford

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

Dawkins

38

6-13

7-8

6

0

5

19

Alarie

25

4-11

1-1

5

5

2

9

Bryan

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

Anderson

1

(M)

0-0

0

.0

0

0

Meagher

Nessley

28

6-6

6-13

9

2

0

18

9

0-3

0-0

2

1

0

0

Team

Totals

1

2(8) 26-56 28-36 35 18

9

80

East Carolina

31

33

64

Duke...............

>

28 -

80

Turnovers - ECU 28. DU 23 Technical Fouls Robinson, Wright. OWicials - Clougherty, Moser, Casari.

UNC's Smith Wins Battle; Tar Heels Topple SyracuseLooking For Two

Duke guard Jonnny Dawkins t24) goes inside for Saturdays game at Cameron two points against East Carolinas Roy Smith (41) Blue Devils defeated the as Blue Devil Jay Bilas (left) looks on during Laserphoto)

Indoor Stadium. The

Pirates, 80-64. (AP

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - North Carolina's Kenny Smith won the battle of freshmen point guards against Syracuse s Dwyane Washington Saturday night and helped the top-ranked Tar Heels to an 87-64 college basketball rout.

Smith, who may be the missing ingredient for the Tar Heels bid to recapture the NCAA crown they won in 1982, scored 11 points and handed off nine assisLs as North Carolina raised its record to 5-0, while snapping the previously unbeaten Orangemen's four-game win streak.

Washington hit only three of 11 shots from the field and two of five from the"

Charles, Gannon Pace NCSU

free throw line for eight points. He had five assists, but committed five turnovers.

-I really don't think it is-a fair comparison, said Smith, who like Washington played his high school ball in New York City. "With Sam, Matt and Brad ... they really play so well; he doesn't have those people up front.

All-America Michael Jordan's 19 points led the balanced North Carolina attack before a crowd of 32,235, the second highest in the history of the Carrier Dome.

The taller and more experienced Tar Heels dominated the game from- the outset, pulling away from a 6-all tie and leading by as much as 34 points midway through the second half. The closest the Orange could get in the second half was 16 points at 50-34.

Other Tar Heels in double figures were Sam Perkins and Matt Doherty with 16 points apiece. Brad Daugherty with 12

and Kenny Smith with 11. Daughtery led in rebounds with 10.

"Kenny Smith ran our club well. said Tar Heels Coach Dean Smith. "He p!a\ ed well and we expected that of him."

Overall, North Carolina shot 63 percent from the field. Syracuse hit 41 percent.

NORTH ( AKOI.INA 'XTi Perkins 7-8 2-3 Hi. Doherly 6-7 4-5 16. Daughertv 6-8 IM) 12. .Jordan 7-14 .V.i 19. Smith ,v,7 1-2 11. Popson o-2 U-O 0, Peterson 1-2 2-2 4. Exum 1-1 12 3. Hale 2-6 0-0 4, Wolf (1-12-2 2. Morris (i-o o-n 0. Makkonen 0-0 0-0 0. Totals3.V.)6 17-21 H7.

SVKACU.SE16II Addison 8-14 2-4 18. Kerins 4 10 0-0 8, Hawkins 4-8 0-0 8. Washington 3-11 2-5 8, Waldron 4-9 0-011. Ale.xis 3-10 041-6,. Monroe 0-2 0-0 0. Triche 0-4 (i-O 0. Papadokos 0-0 0-0 0. Spera 4-5 0-(i 8 Totals :!0-73 t-9 61.

Halftime-North Carolina .42. Syracuse 28 Fouled out^Addison. Waldron Rebound-.North Carolina 37 (Daugherty 1(11,..Syracuse 32 'Hawkins 8i. .Assists North Carolina, 28 Doherty 8i, Syracuse 19 'Washington 5). Total fouls-.North Carolina 11. Syracuse 21 Technical-Syracuse bench A-:{2.2.33

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Forward Lorenzo Charles scored 23 points and guard Terry Gannon added 20 points as No. 8 North Carolina State routed Hofstra 82-56 in a Saturday night college basketball game.

Charles, who sat down with 12 minutes left to play, manuevered inside while Gannon did his damage with long jumpers as the reigning national champion Wolfpack extended its record to 7-1. The 6-foot-7 Charles hit 10 of 12 from'the field and also grabbed 10 rebounds, as did teammate Cozell McQueen.

N.C. State took a 12-10 lead five minutes into action before a 12-0 spurt in which Charles scored half the total. The Flying Dutchmen, 4-3, could get no closer than 26-17 on a 17-foot jumper by Doug Mills with6:35 left.

Gannon scored eight straight points from beyond 20 feet in the final three minutes as the Wolfpack claimed a 40-20 halftime edge.

Tom Schreyer scored six straight points as Hofstra cut the gap to 42-26 with 18:06 remaining, but the Flying Dutchmen couldn't catch the streaking Wolfpack.

Russell Pierre's short bank shot with 7:38 left gave N.C. State its biggest advantage at 74-38.

Schreyer scored 12 points, while and Charles Minor added 11 and Mills had 10.

N.C.. State coach Jim Valvano said Charles performance was an indication of the type of team Wolfpack fans will see for the rest of the year.

"Lorenzo is one of the most consistent players I've ever had. He comes ready to play and he's also a real force," Valvano said. He shoots well, he's got great hands and hes always working. He's an

outstanding player."_

With one week to go before the matchup with Louisville, Valvano said his team deserved a break before

preparing for the Cardinals and would not practice before Thursday.

After the schedule we've played, they're 7-1," he said. I'm very proud of them.

Hofstra coach Dick Berg said his team would have to rebound and shoot well from the outside in order to win. The Flying Dutchmen accomplished neither against the Wolfpack. he said.

N.C. State was physically too big and strong for us inside, and dominated us on the boards, Berg said. We also didn't hit our outside shots and Gannon was unconscious from the outside."

Sickels

Murphy

Martin

Totals

8    0- 1    1-2    0    0    2    1

3    0-1    0- 0    1    0    0    0

2    0- 1    1- 2    1    2    3    1

2(MI 24-62 8-12 28 20 20 .56

N.C. STATE

HOFSTRA

Schreyer

Arnold

McPartland

Weingard

Mills

Minor

Miner

Allen

MP Ft;    FT    R    A K Pt

26    5-10    2-    2    1    3    5    12

13    0-    4    0-    0    2    4    1    0

31    2-    7    0-    0    8    1    1    4

32    2-    4    0-    0    0    7    3    4

33 4-l'0 2- 2 0 5 1 10 18    5-    8    1-    2    -3    0    2    11

21    3-    9    0-    0    8    0    0    6

13    3-    7    1-    2    3    0    2    7

Bolton

Charles

McQueen

Webb

Gannon

Pierre

Butts

Myers

McClain

Battle

Thompson

Warren

Dinardo

Weber

Densmore

Totals

MP

FG FT

16 1- 5

24 10-12 23 2- 6

19 4- 9 28 9-14

25 3- 6 7 0- 1

20 2- 8 10 1- 3

12 2- 4 '71-2

0- 0 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0

200 35-70

R A

0-0 6

3- 3 10 0- 0 10

1- 1 4

2- 2, 1 0- 1 6 0-0 0

4- 4 4 1- 2 0 0- 2 1

0-0 3 0- 1 1 0- 0 0

1- 2 0 0- 2 0 12-20 49

F Pt

3 1 2

1 1 23

2 2 4 6 0 9

4 2 20

1 (I 6 0 1 0

2 3 8 4 1 3 1 2 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

21 13 82

Hofstra........................................20    36-    56

N.C. State..............  40    42-    82

Turnovers: Hofstra 14, N.C, State 16, Technical fouls: Hofstra bench. Officials: Taylor, Rife, Croft. A-10,100.

Deacons Cruise By Appalachian

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Delaney Rudd scored 16 points - the only Wake Forest player in double figures -as the Demon Deacons cruised to a 72-46 college basketball victory over Appalachian State Saturday night.

Rudd scored six of his teams first 16 points as the Demon Deacons ran off 16 unanswered points from the jump ball. Appalachian State missed its first 10 field goals and managed two points on free throws by David Lawrence with 12:38 remaining in the half.

Wake Forest, 5-0, hit 18 of 27 field goals in the first half and finished with 58 percent on 30 of 52 from the field. Anthony Teachey, who'scored 6 points, added 15 rebounck and five assists.

The Mountaineers, who were shooting 49 percent from the field, hit 5 of 25 field goals in the first half and managed 17 of 59 for 29 percent overall. Lawrence scored 15 points, the lone Mountaineer in double figures, as they fell to 3-2.

Every healthy Demon Deacon player got into action, which coach Carl Tacy said would beneficial later.

This level of competition will lead on to Wer    ^icult    opponents,

Tacys^iil- "The experience our players

APPALACHIAN

Lawrence

Davis .

Roberts

Williams

Clyburn

Galloway

Fiorini

Chambliss

Capehart

Dowd

Nealy

Dolan

Totals

MP FG FT R 33 6-16 3- 5 6 18    1- 2    0-    1    2

20    0- 4    2-    2    5

20    1- 2    0-    0    2

30    2-11    4-    6    4

5    0- 2    0-    0    0

10    0- 5    0-    0    1

15    3- 3    0-    1    2

18    0- 5    0-    0    1

4 1-10-02 17 2- 5 1- 2 2 10 1-2 2-2 3 200 17-59 12-19 33

A F Pt

1 15

2 2 4 2 3 2 3 8 2 0 0 0 2 6 0 0

1 0 2 0 2 5 0 1 4 8 20 46

got from these early games will help us down the road.

Tacy also said Wake Forest is making nice progress. Were in pretty good shape if we can get some of our injured players back.

Appalachian State coach Kevin

Cantwell said the Mountaineers had no control over what went on in the game. Wake Forest is one of the best teams in the country and they were hot, Cantwell said. I thought we lost with class. We never quit and^that was a positive.

WAKEFOREST

MP FG FT R A F PI

Garber

Green

Teachey

udJ

Rud Young Toms Davis Bogues Gine

Kejpley

Hillman

HiUman

Wessel

Totals

17    2-    4    5-    8    1

26    4-    9    0-    2    8

27    2-    4    2-    2    15

26    7-    9    0-    0    0

17    3-    6    1-    2    2

15    3-    3    0-    0    3

19    1-    2    2-    2    0

14    0-    2    0-    0    2

18    4-    6    0-    0    4

18    2-    4    0-    0    1

5 0-1 1-3 1 13    2-    2    1-    2    1

2    9

3    8

4    6 1 14

0    7

1    6 0 4 3 0

Jarman Powers Tigers

By The Citadel, 92-70

0 1 0 0 2 2 0 3

200 30-52 12-21 42 29 20 72

Appalachian..................................12    3441

Wake Forest...................  40    32-72

Turnovers: Appalachian 19, Wake Forest 13.

Technical fouls: None.    '

Officials: Burch, Wall, Reese.

A-6,139.

aEMSON, S.C. (AP) - Senior center Murray Jarman scored 22 points to lead Clemson to a 92-70 win over the Citadel here Saturday night.

It was the fifth straight win for the Tigers without a loss. The Bulldi^s fell to 2-2.

Jarman, who had 12 points in the first half, got Clemson off to a fast start scoring six of the Tigers first 12 points as a team.

Clemson built a 10-point lead, 27-17 with 6:06 to play in the half on a basket by Chris Michael and built the lead to 13 at halftime, 41-28.

The Citadel rallied to open the second half as Al Sheppard hit two shots and Patrick Elmore hit a dunk to pull the Bulldogs within seven, 41-34.

Clemson pulled into a 54-36 lead with 10 straight points with 12:45 to play and the game was never in doubt after that.

Michael had 16 points for the Tigers and Sheppard with 14 and Regan Truesdale with 13 led the Bulldogs in scoring.

percent

the floor in the first half while the Citadel hit only 40 perceqt of its shots.

Keep Away

North Carolina States Lorenzo Charles takes a rebound away from Hofstras Charles Minor (34) during first half action in Saturday nights game at Reynolds Coliseum. Charles scored a game-high 23 points as the Wolfpack defeated the Flying Dutchmen,-8^56. (AP Laserphoto)    >

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To Be Or Not To Be. opening on Dec 16, is the title of Anne fitm-cmft's latest riKHM. But a more apt title might To Do Or Not To Do. After all, it's been three years sirHX she's made a movie, and it took plenty of convindtm from her husband and co-star Afe/    to    risk their

marriage for the sake of this uxmder-ful movie " Blame Bancroft's screen absentx on extreme sdectivity and a that no movie role can compare to her billing as wife of direOor-writer-producer-crazy man Mel and mother to their ll-year-old son. Max.

a down irterviews even more than film scripts, Bancroft, mng her career has picked up an Oscar (plus three additional nomina tions) end two Tony Awards, gave her first interview mover five years to F/Moy WEEKiys Robert Windeler.

WiMieier. Why did you decide io oIbUeOrNotlbBdt

Bancroft; I didnt decide. My husband .said, Youre going to do this part. I said, All right, dariing."

Q: Had you wanted to arork with hhn before

Bancroft: Not particularly. When wed go to parties, wed sometimes sing a couf!^ of songs together, but thats it.

Q; Does your mo show any oi being interested in show business?

GETTING PERSONAL WITH

ANNE BANCROFT

SHE'S NOW ON SCREEN WITH LIFE CaSTAR MEL BROOKS

Banaofi; Every s^. in the world. He has been beg^ us for a p^, so we gave him one line in this movie, because 1 thought he should know what Its like. Alter aboin three ch^, he decided th^ he would wait until he was older to be an actor; 1 don't blame him. 1 mean, there was so much work to it that he didnt expect, like just being there. When youre needed, you have to be there. You cant be off reading a book or playing. So he was very disenchanted by the wtxtle thing, which made me very happy.

Q: You were the dfavctor of the fflm Fatto. Would you like to lUrectai^?

Bancron: Never. I think to be a director you have to have a certain kind of personality, which I dont have. 1 do not like manipulating people. My ^eatest phik^hy is to let everybody just be who they want to be, but it isnt workable. Somebody has to have a very dominating hand, and I just dont have that kind of hand.

Q; Do you remendier bow old you were when you decided to be an actres?

Bancroft; When I was little, I was one of those children who used to sing in front of the class, and they ased to put me ig) on picnic tables to sing and dance. So I always wanted to be one. In fact,. 1 never doubted 1 would be one.

Q: Did the Umiled run of your play Duet For One discourage you froui further stage work?

Bancroft: Heres what happens: Every time 1 do the stage, I say to myself, I cannot do the sta^ until my son goes

to coll^, because the best time of the day is when the family comes together at about 7 oclock. We sit down to dinner Max (Bmes in and eas with us and we sit and talk and are a family from 7 on. Now, that is completely ruined when youre on the stage. When the family came together, I was saying bye4>ye. Coming together as a family is one of the great rewards of life and of having a family. So it just didnt make sense to deny myself that for work. 1 promised myself after Golda that I wouldnt work on the stage till my child was in college, but then Duet came and it was such a gorgeous script.

1 loved it. So 1 just said, I have to do this. But then I b^an to miss my family. The sam thing will happen again in five years.

Q: Do you buve any idea what youll be doing next?

Bancrnft: No. I never do. Ini not one of those people who has to know and has to work.1to think it was because I was a woman. I think men really feel thQ' have to go out and kill the bear and brin^ it home. Tho-e are times Ill want to escape into work. But contentment and happiness can be found in other things.

I think just plain old living is wonderful. Id rather do that than acting. Fll have to act once in a white. But I like/iwrtg. RY

Hotfywood correspondent Robert Windeler is the author of Mie Andrews (St Martin s).

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C-1 o The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. -Sunday, December 11,1983    t    I    I    I

Illuminated German Gospel Sold For $11.8 Million In London

LONDON (AP) - Two London book dealers bought a 12th century illuminated German Gospel manuscript last Tuesday for 7.4 million .pounds - $10.7 million. Sotheby's auction house said it was the most expensive art work ever sold.

"The Gospels of Henry the Lion." produced by a monk named Herimann near Brunswick. Germany, in about 1170. was bought by H.B. Kraus and Bernard Quaritch Ltd.. bidding in a packed auction room at Sotheby's offices in fashionable New Bond Street.

Sotheby's has not disclosed the name of the seller. But the gallery said the work probably has had no more than six owners in 800 years.

"It's an enormously im

portant piece of work, which belongs to a very important figure in European history." said Christopher de Hamel, head of Soiebys Western Illuminated Manuscripts department.

"That accounts for its high selling price. Its miniatures are flawless.

Sothebys said that with its 10 percent commission added, the buyers actually would be paying 8.14 million pounds-hi.8million.

The purchasers declined immediate comment.

The previous high price for a painting was ^.4 million dollars for the painting "Juliet and her Nurse" by the British artist J.M.W. Turner, It was sold on May 30. 1980. at Sotheby Parke Bernet in New York.

The Gospels' price also eclipsed the 2.8 million British pounds (then $6.7 million) paid for a pair of diamond ear pendants at Sotheby's Geneva galleries Nov. 14. 1980.

More than 300 international dealers, collectors and reporters crammed the London sale room for the auction, which lasted less than 10 minutes.

The book, which has been out of public view since the 1930s when it was taken out of Austria, measures 13'> inches by 10 inches.

It consists of 226 vellum leaves in a 16th century binding, made in Prague, of wooden boards covered with leather. The binding is ornamented with silver and has a reliquary on the front.

The pages contam 41 miniature paintings and more than 1.500 illuminated initials. One page contains what is probably the only contemporary portrait of England's Henry II. who rul^from 11,54 to 1189

Out drivers are Bonded - they have a license to kill. (756-0088)

Last time . portraits avaiiabie for

Christmas!

Tryon Palace Book Published

wr^

RKC'OKl) PHK K FOB ART . . "Ilic' (.ospds of lleiii'v the l.ioii, ' pioduced l)\ > ((im.m monk about llTll. was sold lasi luesdav m auction at .Sotheby's in l.oudoit lor $10.7 million t$ll.S million includiiiit the com

mission). eslablishint; a new world record lor a work of art. Shown here are four (d II miniature illuminated paintings contained in a 16th century binding made in Pra.nue. (AP l.aserphoto)

NEW BERN - A book about the 18th Century Christmas Season at Tryon Palace has been published by the Tryon Palace Commission and is available at the palace gift shop.

Almost two years in planning. the 48-page, soft-bound book, titled ".A Candelight Christmas at Tryon Palace," is written by Joanne Young of Norfolk. \'a. Ms. Young is the author of a number of publications about historic showplaces. including "A Tryon Treasury." the official guidbook to the Tryon Palace site.

Plans for the publication began several years ago when many reiiuests lor such a book came Irom seasonal

visitors desiring a souvenir of their Christmas experience. The decorating of Tryon Palace and four other landmarks in the historical houses and gardens complex began in Dec.. 1979. This year's Christmas season is the fifth annual and runs through Dec. 21.

"A Candlelight Christmas at Tryon Palace" has 49 color photographs of authentically decorated rooms of Tryon Palace. Stanly House. Stevenson House* Jones

House, and Commission House. Photographs by six photographers over the first four years of the- annual event were chosen The book is available for $3.95 at the Tryon Palace Gift Shop, open Mondays through Saturdays. 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Sundays from 1:30 to 5 p.m. By mail, the book is $4 75. including tax and postage. For copies bv mail, write: Tryon Palace Shop. P. 0. Box 1007, New Bern, N.C.. 28560.

Wall

Portrait

Package

10x13 wall portrait

2 - 8x!0 3 -5x7 15 wallet size

includes 95C deposit

Green Hill Winter Show

Space Left For Tours To England

HALEKiH -- Limited space IS still availa.ble lor two special commemorative tours next spring to England. The delegation of North C a r 0 i IIII a 11 s w ri h VTS'tt ' England during April and .May to celebrate the departure, 4IK) years ago. of an expedition to find a suitable location in the New World lor English colonization.

One of the special tours m 1984, "The Raleigh, '^ will leave Raleigh-Dufh'.am Airport on April 22 and return on May 8. "The Roanoke,' from April 24 to . May 2. is tor those not able to stay away tor the duration-ol the longer trip

"The Raleigh " tour is priced al $2.:'ino per person, and "The Roanoke " Is $l.,5oo. The price includes roundtrip fare irom. Raleigh Durham through New York to London: twin room accomodation in first-class hotels, selected meals including lull English breakfasts every day: and guide services.

Both tours feature special numerous tours across

Band Boosters Meet Tuesday

The Greenville City Hand Boosters will meet Tuesday at 8 p m, m the cateteria at Rose High School. Pertor-mances will be given by the Rose High Symphonic Band and the Middle School Concert Band.

Booster memberships will still be available at this meeting, which is open to the public with all interested persons invited to attend.

England, geared especially toward historical interests^ from Stonehenge into more recent centuries, particularly the 16th century.

Dlve^slOil^ will include lunch at Sir Walter Raleigh's home and tea at Compton Castle with Mrs Walter Raleigh Gilbert

In 1584. two small ships sailed from southwest England to the Outer Banks ot what IS now North Carolina, where they scouted the land for -their sponsor. Walter Raleigh, The two colonies which Raleigh later

sent to Roanoke Island were the first English settlements in the Americas.

.Members of the tour groups will take part in a series,oUcl!\'it!es kicking of) America's 4()(ith anniversary. On April 27 Gov. Hunt will place a commemorative plaque in Plymouth harbor, home port ot the Roanoke voyages; The weekend will also be marked with yacht races, municipal receptions and a special memorial service m Exeter Cathedral to honor the memory of the Roanoke Island settlers.

On April 30. The Bi'itish Library in London's British .Museum will open an exhib-' ition of Elizabethan-era art and documents, including watercolor drawinjs_made on Roanoke Island by John White, governor of the "lost colony. " The same exhibition, with additional material from the state's collection, will open in Raleigh in 1985, More information on the tours is available from: America's 400th Anniversary. N. C. Department of Cultural Resouces. Raleigh. NC. 27611.

GREENSBORO - The Green Hill Center for North Carolina Art. 200 North Davie Street. Greensboro, is currently displaying its fourth annual "The Winter Show," which features 95 artists and craftspeople from across North Carolina. Between 500 to 600 original works are art on exhibit and are for sale.

Artwork being shown in the sikow include paintings, drawings, prints, photographs, sculpture, jewelry, tapestrv. woodworking.

glass, ceramics, weaving, and mixed media work.

A mini-show within a show. "The Unexpected Box " will have handmade boxes in felt, metal, and wood.

Green Hill is a non-profit gallery and educational facility exclusively featuring the visual arts of North Carolina. Por more inlormation on the show, call 373-4515.

sears studios specialize in photographic portralu ot bablM^ children, adults and family groups. No appointment necwsary. % for each additional subjea In a portrait package Poses our selection.

Also Available In Addition To This Offtr

Black Background & Double Feature Portraits Passport Photos Copy 4 Restoration

EXTENDED THRU WED., DEC. 14

Studios located in most larger Sears retail stores. Studio Hours: Sunday 1 pm-5 pm (where store is open). Mon, & Tues. 10 am-5 pm, Wed.-Sat. 10 am-8 pm, (or until store closing if prior to 8 pm).

Use vour SearsCharge

You can count on

Sears

Portrait

Studio

Of*CK ANDCQ

Satisfaction guaranteed or your rrwney back

Lose Weight with Jack Lalantie

Meadow Fresh Diet Drink tastes like a delicious shake. Three flavors to choose from.

Phone 752-1201 Of 756-8720

Take care of business.

The

Holiday Glow Bouquet from your FTDj Florist

5lio()

If 27 Ann': iKierf T^krinr 2774

Send your thoughts with special iff care.

BEWARE

Of So Called V2 Price Sales And Big Discount Diamond Prices. At Robinson Jewelers We Never Run Sales On Diamonds.! Instead, We Put An Everyday Low Price On All Our Stones. Well Explain In A Plain Everyday Language The Size & Quality Of The Stone You Are Looking At-Compare Size, Quality & Prices. Youll Appreciate It!!!

DIAMOND SOLITAIRES

ROUND

.12 CT.......................$185.00

.15 CT  ...... .......$200.00

.18 CT.......................$225.00

.20 CT...................... $250.00

.22 CT. ....: ................$275.00

.24 CT . ............  $370.00

.25 CT.....................  $400.00

.27 CT..................... $415.00

.28 CT  ...............$430.00

.29 CT .........    $425.00

.30 CT ...  ...................$675.00

.31 CT ........... .....$675.00

.32 CT ...... $700.00

.37 CT.......................$750.00

.40 CT ................$800.00

.42 CT................  $850.00

.45 CT  .....  $1500.00

.48 CT.......*...............$1400.00

.57 Cf......................$1600.00

.60 CT.........    .$1800.00

.62 CT......................$1950.00

.82 CT..........  $2800.00

1.10 CT ...............$3400.00

1.62 CT.....................$4000.00

Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers

"Your Independent Diamond Jeweler"

758-2452

407 Evans Mall Downtown Greenville II It Doesnt Tick, Tock To Us

SOMFTHING BEAUTIFUL IS IN THE WIND

Decorative Brass Accessories & Gifts

Ceramic Creations

Christmas Shop & Ornaments Featuring The Spillmans Homestead Collection

Glassware By Baylos & Pilgrim

Spode Christmas China

Crystal

Limited Edition & Original Prints

Claire Burke Pot Pourri

I Hand Carved Ducks & Fine Woodcrafts

I Fine Lamps

Wicker Baskets Flower Arrangements

Bamboo pUrniture

iany OtiiEX Dine iPexi.ona ^ <Dfome cDfcceiioxUi

TapscoU Oesigi)

m

FIFTH & READE STREETS*757-3558 ' INTERIORS. ACCESSORIES. SPECIALTY GIFT SHOPPE Mon.-Fri., 10 AM-9 PM Sat.. 10 AM-6 PM

Relax during the holidays in casual wide-wale corduroy skirts by Mallard Landing. Choose from assorted colors including gray, navy, red and camel in sizes 1-15. Reg. $25, now only $15.90. Plaid woven shirts by Hatteras in sizes 5-15 are $15 values, now $9.90. Solid cotton knit ties are just $3.90 each.





SAVE M 50!

Kenmore dishwasher with Dots/oan cycle

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised G-12-11

Built-in Reg. $449.99

Water Miser cycle and Power Miser control help save energy. Three spray arms provide 3-level wash action. Pots/pans cycle. Sale ends Dec 27.

Portable. Reg. $499.99  .....349.99

SAVE *30

Garbage disposal

Vb-HP with corrosion resistant stainless steel grinding chamber. Reg. $99.99. Sale ends Dec 24.

69

99

99

SAVE 90

1/3-HP Garage door opener with 3000 codes

149

Reliable solid-state transmitter with over 3000 digital security codes. 4V2-min. light delay. Strong steel drive system. Safety reverse. Makes a great gift. Reg. $239.99. Thru Dec. 31.

SAVE 30

Vi-HP garage door opener

129

99

Reg. $159.99. 'U-HP opener provides convenience, security. Buy yours today. Thru Dec 27.

SHOP Sears for more gift giving ideas!





tv-4 The Daily Reflector, Greenvllle. N.C.

Monday Friday Daytime

i-SS (B CuMUd Cunen (Tini) 5:lEyeMt(Pri) ONemCToe-Fri)

O Jimmy Swaifut (Mn)

QJimBakker

efleiitiineid

S PTL Ctab (Frenck) (Tie) Pattern Fw Living (Wed) Gods News Behind The News (Thn, Pri)

(SPN)liiricCkaniel (ESPN) Womeai BUIiardi (R) (Tie) Gymnastics (Fri)

(USA) Movie (Mon) One More River (19S4)(Tue) The Man Upsturs (1959XW!) Man Of The Moment (1955)(Thu) Bonnie Prince Charlie 947)

S:10 (S Worid At Large (Moo) i:10 (HBO) Video Jnkeboi Christmas (Thn)

:MO Another Life 00 Jimmy Swaggart O News (Mon)

0 Its Yoor Bnsiness (Moo)

CatuGiic Mass (Tue) Chdress Fund (Thu) Agriculture U.S.A. (Fri)

0 PTL Qnb atalisn) (Tie) In

Touch (Wed, Fri) Westbrook Hospital (Thu)

(SHOW) Mark Twain Theatn (Tie) Thunderbirds 2086 (Wed) (ESPN) Sportswoman (R) (Moo) (;00O Romper Room O O ABC News This Morning Panorama

O Carolina In The Moraing ^ G Aimanar O Carolina Today 0 CBS Euly Morning News (Moo-Thn) A Better Way (Fri)

<1* Montij) Sfiief/Hh 0News

0 The Blackwood Brothers (Moo) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Tue) The Kroeze Brothers (Wed) Jim Bakker (Thu) Sound Of The Spirit (Fri) (SPN)MusicChanoel (SHOW) Movie (Mon) The Great Adventure (1976)

(ESPN) Bosine Tinaes (HBO) Animal Talk (Moo) Sugar Ray's All-SUrs(Tue)

(HBO) Movie (Wed) Cyrano (1974KThu) Christmas Moun-Uin(1981)

(USA) Wrestling (R) (Fri)

6:16 (SHOW) Movie (Thu) A Cliristmas Carol (1951)

6:M O Jimmy Swaggart 0 CBS Early Morning News 0 ABC News lUsMomiiig 0 Ben Haden (Moo) Oral Roberts (Tue) The LaHayes (Wed)

I Are Your Feet Giving You Problems?

Foot Creme

A stimulating jell-like creme to cool & soothe hot tired feet. Softens rough calluses and flaky skin.

Call in Gteenyille 752-1201

Stan Rosenthal (Thu) Bible Pathways (Fri)

(HBO) Movie (Toe, Fri) Heidi (1965)

trttOCoontryMonring 7M0 Fit For Life O O 0 Good Moning America

1

(SHOW) Movie (Wed) Adventures Of The Wilderness Family (1975KThu) A Boy Named Charlie Brown (1969KFri) Yes, Giorgio (1982)

(HBO) Fraggle Rock (Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Thu) Blinded By The Ught (1980) 7:M0IDreamOfJeannie 7:45 0AJL Weather IrOOOBioodie Pp^ A'fricOue O CBS Morning News 0 Real World Of Tammy Faye 0 GED (Moo* Wed) To Be Annoiinmf (Tup Fri) New Tpph Times (Thu)

(Sra)MnicChaimel (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Tbe WUd Pony (1980) (ESnOSportsCeoter (HBO) Movie (Tue) The Sign Of Four (1982XWed) Absence Of Malice (1981)

(BBO) B.C.: A Special Christmas (Fri)

(NICK) Mr. Wisards Worid (Moo, Wed, Fri) What Will TTiey Think Of Next? (Tue, Thu)

(USA) Calliope 8K150 Bewitched 1:15 (ESPN) Sidelines (R) (The) This Week In The NBA (R) (Wed) Horse Racing Weekly (R) (Thu)SportsWeek(R)(Fri) 8:300 My UtUe Margie Tom And Jerry 0 Paul Yonggi Cho (Mon) Jim Bakker (Tue) The Camerons (Wed) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Thu) Contact (Fri) 0EdncaUooal (HBO) Barbara MaodrelL LatfyIsAChamp(Moo)

(HBO) Movie (Fri) The Last Unicom (1982)

(NICK) Todays Special 8:85 01 Love Lucy 8:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter (liw-Fri)

9:OOODobieGl]lis O The Waltons O O Hoar Magasine ILoveLocy ORidiardSimmoiiB 00Dooahne

he

(itchcn Cupboard

Ltd

654 Arlington Blvd. 756-1310

Its not too early to sign up for our winter classes. In January well have classic Italian on Wednesday night and 60 Minute Gourmet on Thursdays.

Come by and see our great selection of holi* day merchandise & pick up a newsletter for further details. /

0C8SMomiiNewi 0FanUme 0Jlm Bakker

(SHOW) Movie (Tue) Dont Cry,

Its Only Thunder (1982) (SHOW) SomeoBef la The

Kitchen Wtb Jamie (Wed) Santas Magic Toy Bag (Fri) (ESPN)BoinemTimea(R) (HBO) Movie (Moo) Vanishing WUdemess(1974)

(HBO) B.C.: A Special (Mno (Wed)

(NICiQLivewlre (USA) Cartoons 7:S8SAllvs!    ^

Great Space Coaster (SHOW) Ifovie

B Jimmy Swaggart 6 Senme Street (R)g (SHOW) Randy Newman At The Odeon (The) Faerie Tale Theatre (Thn)

(ESPN) CoUege BaakctbaU

(lion, We4 Rodeo (Tue) Skiii^ (Thu) Australian Rules Footbail (Fri)

(HBO) Rich Littles Chriitmas Carol (Iha)

(NIOQPtawheel

(U8A)AliviAadWeO!

(CAL) Calliope B Movie (Mon) Mark, I Lave You (1880)(Tue) n Be Seeing You (1^9)(Wed) "Never Say Goodbye (1948KThu) Interlude (1957)(Fri) Christmas In Coonecticnt (1945) 9:8801 Married Joan Leave tt To Beiver BAU la The Family B Contact (Mon) ShUoh Christian Retreat (Tue) Frederick K. Price (Wed) U^t And Uvely (Thu) Heritage U.S.A. Update (Fri)

(SHOW) Aerobidae (Mon, Wed, Fri)

10:98e78eChdi BDonahne BFrogHoDow

Andy Griffith OODifrr^^tnl(R)

O B The New |25,8M Pyramid

6 Lovi Connection

9 PArik (Mcs) Jerry Bsr nard (Tue) Power Of Pentecost (Thu) Something Beautiful (Fri) 6 Educational Programming (Mon-Tha) Footsteps (Fri) (SPN)MmlcChamieI (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Forever Darling (1956)(Wed) The Happy Road (1957Xnm) They Got Me Covered (1943)(Fri) It Happened At The Worlds Fair (1963)

(SHOW) Bonnie Scotland (The) (ESPN) College BaaketbaD Preview (Ha)

(HBO) Movie (Mon) Breaker Morant (1980)(Wed) The Man From Snowy River (1982)(Thn) StUl Of Hie Night (1982)(Fri) The Secret Of NIMH (1982) (HBO) Daryl HaO & John Oatea In Concert (Tae)

10*19 Q Edge Of Night Bewilched OBSaieOfTheOentiry OBPremYonrLnck 6 Lavene A Shirley & Conopn-

B Gods Newa Behind The Newa(Wed)

B Edncational Programming

SideUnea (Ha) Sportswoman (Fri)

19:48 S Short Story ShowcsM (Fri)

1119BB6BeaM)n(R)

Medical Center OBWheelOfFortene OB The Price b Right BJim Bakker

B American Short Story (The) (ESPN) NBA Baakettedl (Mon) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Tue) Sportswoman (R) (Wed) Gymnastics (Thu) Billiards (Fri) (USA)DMi9>ForLiviiM 11.-05B The Catites 11:15 S Edncational Program-miM(Fri)

11:890 Another Life OOBLovteg Q Jim Bra BDreunHowe B Edncational Programming (Thn)

(SHOW) Movie (Tue) Victor / Victoria (1982)

(ESPN) Awtraliaa Ruki Football (The) Womens Billiards (Wed)

(HBO) Sliar Rays AD-Stars (The) Cavett Behind The Scenes (Thu) Emmet Otters Jug-Band Christmas (Fri)

(USA) You: Magarine For Wom-

(1945XThu) They Made Me A Criminal (1939XFri) "Back Door To Heaven (1939)

eeooooNewi

Panorama 0 Family Feud BLericrSnmraUTeMhteg 6 Educatioaal Programming (SPN)YonrHour (SHOW) Movie (Mon) My Favorite Year (1982XWed) The Man From Snowy Riv (1982XThu) I Ought To Be In Pictures (1982XFri) Dont Cry, Its Only Thunder (1982) (ESPN) Motocrom Racing (Thn) Soccer (Fri)

(HBO) Movie (Mon) Blinded By The Light (1980XTue) Search And Destroy (1981)

(HBO) ^ Oantmner Rqwrii, PrcMnte (Wed) Barbara Man-drell: The Lady Is A Champ (Thu)

(USA) Movie (Mon) One More River (1934XTue) The Man Upstairs (1959XWed) Man Of The Moment (1955)(Thu) Bonnie Prince Charlie (1947XFri) Fighting Youth (1935)

1S.'9 S Paryiiasss 12:300 00 Ryans Hope O O Search For Tomorrow O Q The Young And The Reri-

B Camp Meeting, USA S Electric Com^(R)

(ESPN) Horaeihow Jumping (Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Wed) Table For Five (1983)

(HBO) Daryl HaU A John Oates toConcert(Fri)    ^

1:99000Ail My uidre Movie (Mon) The Hucksters (1947XTue) Tortilla Flat (1942XWed) The Mask Of Shsba (9*?XT?!) Chia? Girl (iTtlxF^) C^ DMger mi) o o Days Of Ov Uves

5 Edncational Programmteg (Mon, Wed-Fri) Short Story Showcase (Tue)

(SPN) Exerdsei (Mon, Tne, Thn, Fri) Microwaves Are For Ckwk-ing(Wed)

(ESPN) Motocrom Racteg (The) Rinoide Review (R) (Thu) 1:050 Movie (Moo) Since You Went Away (Part 1) (1944)(Tue) Since You Wait Away (Part 2) (1944XWed) The Hai^ Man (1974XThu) Bus Rileys Back In Town (1985)(Fri) Shadow Over Elvot (1968)

1J8 O 0 As The Worid Tra BDerins Coffee Shop

6 We Uve Next Door (The) (SPN) Good Ufe (Moo) American Baby (Tue) Personal Computer (Wed) Companion Dog Training (Thu) Telephone Auction (Fri)

(ESO Independoice Bowl (Moo)

(HBO) Movie (Mon) Still Of The Night (1982XThu) Vanishing WUdemess(1974)

(HBO) Bnmet Otters JatBand Christinas (The)

1-910 Fit For Ufe (Mon) Sewing Etc. (Tne) Mrice It Easy, Make It Microwave (Wed) Alive! (Thu) American Baby (Fri) 00BOneUfeToUve O0 Another Worid 0 Real Worid Of Tammy Faye

(Continued On Page 9)

Michele Will Tell

By Michde Marki

DEAR MICHELE; How can I get tiw draw Fantaiy to answer my letters. Where can I write where tiwy will he rare to get my letter. PEGGY PATEAT, HICKORY, N.C.

TO PEGGY IN-HICKORY: Unfortunately, your letters may never be answered. The game show Fanta^ has dropped from the daytime schedule due to poor ratings.

DEAR MICHELE: I would like to know MNnetklag about Ken Kercheval of DaUas. Where can I write to him? SUSAN BENNEH, ROCKY MOUNT, N.C.

TO SUSAN IN ROCKY MOUNT: Ken Kercheval was bom July 5, in Woleottville, Indiana. A former Broadway star, he was originally trained as a singer and appeared in several musicals An antique aficionado, his diversified collections include early American glass, regional artists of the 1930s and Packard automobiles. One of his favorite pasttimes is restoring these antique cars, and he currently owns two 1941 Packards. The 48-year-old actor is estranged from his wife of 12 years and is the father of three grown children, Aaron (26), Caleb (21) and Liza (23). Write Ken in c/o Dallas,' CBS-TV, 7800 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles. Ca., 90038,

DEAR MICHELE: My mother told me that my idol, Howard Cosell, wears a hairpiece. Can you pleara tell me If thte shocking Information is true? SHOCKED, GREENVILLE, N.C.

TO SHOCKED IN GREENVILLE: Yes. its true, but not entirely shaking. Howard has donned his toupee for so long that many people, have forgotten what he looked like without it. Many celebrities are quite comfortable with their adopted domes, including actor Burt Reynolds.

DEAR MICHELE: I just read an Interesting nrtlcle nboat Dennis Weaver. Also, 1 watched the premier of his CBS serial "Emerald Point N.A.S." Three years ago a radio station In Richmond, Virginia, was Interviewing singers on Christmas Day and they also sang. Dennis Weaver wu on the show and rang "Pretty Paper, Tied In a Ribbon of Blue" and I would Uke very !!ch ts write to him for iofortnstion 02 how to eh!2B.s reeerd or tape of his version of this song. Could you pleaae give me his address? EVA ENNIS, DURHAM, N.C.

To EVA IN DURHAM: You may write to Dennis Weaver in C O ' Emeral Point N.A.S.," CBS-TV, 7800 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, Ga.. 90038.

DEAR MICHELE: How can I reach the hottest lady on television, Joan Collins of "Dynasty? CHRIS HUNT, RALEIGH, N.C.

TO CHRIS IN RALEIGH: Fans may contact Joan Collins in c/o "Dynasty,' ABC-TV, 2040 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, Ca., 90067.

DEAR MICHELE: Would you please teU me the birthdnte of John Stamos on General Hospital"? MARCIA HEDGEPETH, ROANOKE RAPmS, N.C.

TO MARCIA IN ROANOKE RAPIDS: John Stamos, who made his television acting debut in January 1982 as Blackie Parrish on General Hospital, was born August 19,1963, in Los Angeles, California. He is the eldest child of Bill and Loretta Stamos.

Mttal Rimlass

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Glass Or Plastic Lansas In Any UsaMa PrsKrIption

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UJ90 Movie (Moo) The Son Of Monte Cristo (1940HTae) EtenuUy Youra (1939)(Wed) Love, Honor And Goodbye

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Greenville

756-8990,1^!

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In The Area

wm

Rose High Concert Scheduled

The music department of Rose High School will present its annual Christmas Concert in the Rose High Gym at 8 p.m. Thursday. The program is free and is open to the public.

Bettv Topper will direct The Choral Rampants, accompanied at the piano bv Bill Messick and Philippe Aronson. This group will present traditional Christmas music, a jazz number, a spiritual and Mendelssohn s "There Shall Be A Star."    .

The high school orchestra, directed by Lon Lloyd, will perform a "Suite of Carols by Leroy Anderson and Ralph Vaughn Williams'"Rhosymedre." The Chamber Players will present Vivaldi's "('oncerto in D Minor.'

Other presentations will be made by the Rose Band directed bv Chuck Allen in a performance of Tchaivkosky's "Nutcracker .Suite." Charles Carter's "Overture for Winds", and "The Christmas .Song" by Mel Torme

The program will conclude with the chorus, orchestra and band joining forces in "Deck the Halls and a medley ol carols with the audience invited to join in the singing.

Coordination Sought

A meeting on domestic violence will be held Tuesday from f to :f p.m at the Fitt County Office Building. Room 201. The meeting is being held in an effort to improve coordination Ixdueen existing providers of services and identifying addituMiafsercices needed. ---------------------    ,

Anvone interested may attend. For more mlormation. call Dr Don Reeves. Fitt County Mental Health Center.

Dixon Heads Arts Council Drive

local attorney Fhillip R.

Di'xon has been selected as chairman ot the 1984 Fitt-Greenville Arts Council Fund Drive

A native ot Wake Forest, he graduated troni the Fast Carolina I'niversity .School ot Business with honors in 1971 and attended the I'NC-fhapel Hill School dt Law He IS president of the Fitt County chapter ot the F('l Firate ('liib and a past president of the FCC Alumni Association

A partner m the Dixon.

Duifus and Duub law tirm here, he is the attorney tor the Greenville City Schools and the Greenville Ctilities f'ommission He and his wile. Candace, have t\Vo children. Phil.Jr and Davey

Rose Plans Book Fair

The J.H. Rose High School Libraiw-.Media Center will haVe a book tail- Mondav through Thursday in the library, where books will be displaced tor all high school curricula as well as pleasure reading aii'd information books for all ages

Parents Night" has been scheduled for Tuesdav from .i-8 p.m Proceeds will be used to purchase tiooks for the school's iibrarx.

Detective Attends Seminar

George F. .\lbertme .!r. a detective with the Greenville Police Deparimeni. recently rompleied a week-long seminar on Police-Medical Investigation of Death" in .Miami.

The seminar. wa> designi'd to familiarize experienced investigators with the types and trequencies of sudden. -unexpected .amt violent .death." which police officers are expecteii.to iiivestmale

Alliertme. a Bo>ttn, Ma^s. n.itive. joined the Greenville Hiiparf ment in March 1977 A polu,-o science graduate of Pitt Community c,h'ege iii 1982, AlH-rtine ha." been assigned to the department" detecto edn iMoii lor the past five years

PIIILI.IP DIXON

TIk

Pitt County's

Conseryativf Voice

Republican

Corner

AsR a vf 'UO'j person this question Where do you believe our nqhts come from':' Many will say that they believe our rights come from governm.ent. Its not surprising that so manv peOpie think this The idea that Government is The Great Benefactor the answer to all our needs, is one that IS pushed upon us all the time But this .is dangerous thinking It will lead to the tyranny of total government- After all. if you believe Government gives you your rights to begin with, you can't have much to say when its actions deprive you of those rights.

Republicans believe as the founders of this Republic did and stated in our Declaration of Independence, that men are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights . These few words recognize the existance of God and the fact that the rights of personal freedom, private property, freedom of movement, and all other rights we as Americans enjoy, come from God - not Government. No other nation has ever begun with such a recognition Our founding fathers intended for government to merely secure and safeguard our God-given rights.

The Republican Party is the Conservative party that believes m this idea of limited government and individual freedoiTi For a free copy of The Principles of The Republican Party and our Platform, or for information on how you can register or change party affiliation right in the privacy of your own home, call or write today

Pitt County Republican Party P.O. Box 2927 '    Greenville. N C 278B4

756-7590

This ad was paid for by the Pitt County Republicans

Assistance

Ecuminical assistance to the poor is offered by Church Ministries United Inc., which opened an office here last week. Some of the volunteers taking part, shown left to right, are .Mrs. Jack W. Wilkerson of First Presbyterian Church, director; Muffy Bowman of St.Pauls Episcopal, co-director; Grace Carraway of Oakmont Baptist; Barbara Lee of Holy Trinity United Methodist and Jean Longhill of St. Peter's Catholic.

Train And Car Collide

A Kinston womans car was demolished but she sustained only facial lacerations when her vehicle was hit by a train at the N.C. 33 railroad crossing adjacent to Prepshirt Friday at 9 * 45 d m

Trooper A.G. Wright said Allison Kay Jenks. 18. apparently failed to see the warning lights and drove on to the track. Her car was struck on the right side by the train operated by Warner Robert Wallace, 43. of Rocky Mount. The car ms carried 40 feet down the track and the tram came to a stop 160

feet farther on.    .    ^

Ms. Jenks, an East Carolina University student was charged with failing to stop for a railroad crossing signal.

(Please turn to A-31

The Recreation and Parks Department has a variety of arts and crafts activities planned for the Fall. Call 7524137 for more information.

CENTURV 21

Tipton & Associates 756-6810

Church Mmistry^pens^ffice

By CAROLTVER -Reflector Staff Writer

Church Ministries United Inc. has opened an office here to serve the poor who are not being served at any critical time by an appropriate agency

The office is located at 917 Dickinson Ave. and is open each Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday from 9:30 to noon. The agency is a joint activity of 15 Greenville churches who chose about a vear and a half ago to begin to coordinate their efforts to assist the poor.

The churches taking part are Oakmont Baptist, Immanuel Baptist. First Free Will Baptist, St. Pauls Episcopal. Holy Trinity United Methodist. Jarvis Memorial United Methodist, First Pres by t e r i a n, Hollywood Presbyterian. First Pentecostal Holiness. Greenville Seventh-Day Adventist, St. Peter's Catholic. St. Gabriels Catholic, Hooker Memorial Christian. First Christian. Gloria Dei Lutheran and Our Redeemer Lutheran Other churches are welcome to participate, ministries

office manned by volunteers from the various churches

director Mrs. Jack Wilkerson said.

Mrs. Wilkerson, a member of the First Presbyterian Church, volunteered her services to organize the program. The churches have decided to expand the services through use of an /olur elm

taking part, according to the board ehairmanr the-' Rev. Frank Gentry, pastor of the First Pentecostal Holiness Church.

What we first try to do." co-director Muffv Bowman a -volunteer from St. Paul's Episcopal Church, said, is refer peopfe wJio come to us whenever we can to the appropriate agency or service. When there doesn't seem to be one, we help them ourselves through the donations received through the participating churches."

"And we take referrals." Mrs. Wilkerson said, "from the various agencies. Often we can help .someone immediately, whereas agencies have to go through all the paperwork and take longer. -We cuCG'uragc people to help themselves all they can.

Often we pay portions of rent, fuel, utilityx food bills. Tax-deductible donations to the ministry may be made directly (incorporation and tax-exempt status was ac

complished early* this year) or through any of the participating churches. The address is Church Ministries United Inc., P.O. Box 2193. Greenville, N.C. 27834.

The office phone number is 758-7161.

Association Elects LeRoux

. Daneel LeRoux. director of the Eastern Carolina \oca-tional Center in Greenville, has been elected vice president ol the Eastern Region of the North Carolina Association ot Sheltered Workshops. He was elected at the annual meeting of the North Carolina Association of Sheltered Workshops held recently in Southern Pines.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center, the largest rehabilitation facility in the southeastern United States, provides training and employment for 200 mentally and physically handicapped adults.

LeRoux has directed the facility for two years.

The Association of Sheltered Workshops is a statewide organization of workshop directors and others interested in promoting programs of employment and rehabilitation for the handicapped.

Designs Sought For Brochure

Designs are being sought for the cover ot the 1984 Gritton Shad Festival souvenir brochure, festival officials say.

Committee members said the brochure designs should include the following information: "Shad Fever - Catch It: ", 14th annual Griffon Shad Festival, April 10-15, Grifton. The following information should also appear on the back cover; "Grifton: The Family Town, located on highway 11 between Greenville and Kinston."

The designer will be recognized in the brochure and 5.(K)0 copies will be"distributed.

Deadline for designs is Jan. 15 and they may be submitted to Grifton Shad Festival, Box 928, Grifton, N.C., '28530, For further information call 524-4356 or write the festival at the above address.

Nurses Schedule Registrars

Registrars taking calls for the Pitt County Professional Private Duty Nurses Registry are: Grace Turner. R.N.. 756-0375. Dec. 12-16, and Helen McArthur. R.N.. 756-1854. Dec, 19-23. The registry consists of all nurses approved for private duty in Pitt County Memorial Hospital and covers home and hospital cases. On weekends, call either of the above.

MOM).\Y

12 Noon - (ireenville Noon Rotary Club meets at Rotary BIdg 12:30 pm Kiwanis of Grcenville-l'niversity Club meets at Holiday Inn 5:30 p m - Greenville TOPS Club meets at Planters Bank 6::i0p m Rotary Club meets 6::io p.m - Host Lions Club meets at Tom's Restaurant (i iid p m Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:3(1 p til - Sweet .Adelines, Eastern Chapter meets at The Me.moria! Baptist Church 7:30 pm - Greenville Barber .Shop Chorus meets at Jayeee Park BIdg

8:00 p m - Lodge No 8,i Loyal OrdiToi tm Mwsi' -    . .

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7 (HI a m - Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers lo iKi ,1 m Kiwanis (iolden K Cluhnii'eNal Masonic hall tii.io p m - Down East Chapter ol Painting and Decorating Contractors of America m't at Three Steers

,7:(Ki qim - Family Support Group at Family Practice? Center

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O 9 9 Hardcaatle A McCormick The Judge and Mark compete with a 70-year-old crook and a rogue cop for the |250,000 spoils of a 25-year-old robbery. (1 hr.)

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O O Knight Rider An explosion causes a memory loss for Michael Knight, who assumes his former identity and perceives KITT as an enemy. (1 hr.) 09 All-Star Party For Frank Sinatra Sinatra is honored for his contributions to music and to humanitarian causes in a black-tie celebration with appearances by James Stewart, Carol Bur-

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ban, Julio Iglesias, Burt Reynolds, Steve Lawrence, Vic D^one, Richard Burton, and Cary Grant. (1 hr.)

9 Nature Amate: The Great Fig Tree The majestic fig tree which rises above the lush rain forest of Belize in Central America is viewed. (1 hr.)

(SPN) Scandinavian Weekly A tour of the Scandinavian countries with an eye to culture, scenery and night life is taken. (Ihr.)

(SHOW) Movie Night Shift

(1982) Henry Winkler, Michael Keaton. Two nighttime morgue attendants become love brokers for a grogp of hookers who have lost their pimp. R (1 hr., 45 min.)

(ESPN) NBA Basketball Philadelphia 76ers at Milwaukee Bucks (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

(HBO) Movie Table For Five

(1983) John Voight, Richard Crenna. A man who was divorced five years earlier returns to his now remarried wife to take a more active role in raising his children. PG (1 hr., 59 min.)

(NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain A sightseeing trip to Aucklands dormant volcanoes brings further evidence that the twins have a dangerous mission. (Part 2)

8459 Nobel Prise Ceremonies Close-up views of the 1983 Nobel Prize winners as they receive the worlds most highly regarded awards from the ceremonies held in Sweden and Norway. (2 hrs.)

8:30 9 Oral Roberts (NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain A sudden shark attack embroils the twins in the life or death struggle between Mr. Jones and the enemy. (Part 3)

9400InToacfa 0 0 9 Movie Through Naked Eyes (Premiere) David Soul, Pam Dawber. Someone has joined the strangely exciting game of a musician and a mysterious young woman who watch each other through their apartment windows. (2 hrs.)

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O O Movie Coast To Coast (1980) Dyan Cannon, Robert Blake. A runaway housewife and a scrappy trucker hauling cattle coast to coast become the target of a wild cross-country

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9 Masterpiece Theatre The Citadel Andrew moves to another mining town with his new wife and finds that some physicians are engaged in unethical practices. g(l hr.)

(SPN) Telephone Anction (NICK) Arts Playboose; Tintypes The Broadway cast reassembles for this special "TV production of the musical revue depicting American history from 1890 to 1920. (1 hr., 55 min.)

(USA) Dragnet

9:30 O 9 Goodnight, Beantown (USA) Dragnet 10:000 Ben Haden (I) News

@ 9 Trappsr JekiL M.D. An tradition-minded woman doctor (Elain Stritch) dashes with Nurse Brancusi over the role of nurses in medicine. (1 hr.)

9 Robert. Schuller 9 Dinner At Julias Chocolate truffles inspire a visit to a chocolate factory; Julia prepares roast saddle of veal, and pest chef Leslee Reis makes curried oysters, g (SPN) Oral Roberts (SHOW) An Audience With Mel Brooks Mel Brooks welcomes guests Anne Bancroft, Ronny Graham and Jonathan Pryce in this mixture of music, drama and comedy. (1 hr.)

(HBO) Standing Room Only Red Skelton Presents Freddy The Freeloaders Christmas Dinner Vincent Price and Imo-gene Coca co-6tar with Red Skelton in the story of Freddy the Freeloaders trials and trib- ulations as he plans a holiday dinner.

(USA) Golf Tips From The Pros

Various tips toward the improvement of your golf game. 10:05 9 News

10:30 O Rock Oiurdi Proclaims (S Odd Couple 9 Dave Allen At Large (SPN) Jimmy Swaggart (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) The New Serendipity *Singcri 10:35 9 Sporth Page 10:55 (NICK) Great PainUngi Featured: Manets Olympia.

11:00 o O O O 9 9 News 3) When Will The Dying Stop? Charlton Heston hosts this portrayal, narrated by Mason Adams, of Third World families struggling to overcome political repression, poverty and unstable economies. (1 hr.)

QCBSNews

Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

9Gene Scott 9 Twilight Zone (SHOW) Movie Yes, Giorgio (1982) Luciano Pavarotti. Kathryn Harrold. A renowned operatic tenor becomes romantically involved with a pretty voice specialist. PG (1 hr., 50 min.)

(HBO) Movie Right Of Way U983) Bette Davis, James Stewart. An aged couple take drastic steps to prevent their separation. (1 hr, 45 min.)

(USA) Countdown To 84; Sarajevo And Lou Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates. (R) ll;95fer3rFslwdl 11:10 (NICK) Arts Interhude Bruno Rigutto, pianist, plays Chopins Nocturne No. 1 and Polonaise in A.

11:15009ABC News OGoodNews O Jack Van Impe 11:20 9 CBS News

M:25 (N!CK) First Edition Guest; Louis Auchincloss, author of "Exit Lady Masham, an historical novel about the court of 18th-Century Queen Anne and the queens lady-in-waiting. 11:300 Contact O Austin City Limits Encore O Movie Class Of 44 (1973) Gary Grimes, Jerry Houser Three boys graduate from high school and start new adventures in life. (1 hr., 55 min.)

O Movie Nashville Grab'^ (1081) Jeff Conaway, Cristina Raines. A country singer per-

Sundsy, December 11. 1983 TV-3 forming in a womens prison is kidnapped by a pair of female convicts attempting to break out. (R) (2 hrs.)

9 Movie Friday The 13th. Part 11" (1981) Amy Steel, John Furey The grisly killings continue at a summer camp that had been closed down after a series of bizarre murders occurred there. R (1 hr., 27 min.)

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(USA) Sports Probe 11:35 9 Entertaimnent This Week

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11:45 O Jim Whittington O Duke Coaches Show 12:00 O Larry Jones O Rat Patrol

(D Movie The Killing Affairs" (1971) Burt Reynolds, Joan Hackett. (2 hrs.)

9 Jim Bakker

(SPN) MusicChannel Video music: rock, country, jazz and soul. (2 hrs.)

(USA) Tennis "Transamerica Tournament Mens Finals (R) (4 hrs.)    <

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By Larry McMurtry

Why should I feel lonely? Is not our planet in the Milky Way?" asked Henry David Thoreau, who claimed to have never found a companion as companionable as solitude.

1 wouldn't go that farthe Star Wars trilogy has not made me any fonder of the neighborhood galaxies but 1 have noticed that solitude is becoming more companionable than it used to be. It is an option that I frequently select, though perhaps never lor^ enough to really test my affection for it. I am in the book business and the screenwriting business, both of which are profusely peopled. Solitude as a respite from dense activity never, in my case, produces the condition called loneliness so inescapable for many people, and so painful. The lonely moments Ive experienced have grown out of circumstances other than solitude.

In fact, the most obvious thing one can say about loneliness is that it is not simply the result of a lack of people in ones life. It frequents crowds and crowded situations. Good marriages as well as large and seemingly stable families harbor some of the loneliest people alive.

The alienating, isolating capacities of modern cities get blamed for much loneliness, perhaps rightly. But neither the modem nor the urban can be used as a defining condition. I am writing this essay from rural Texas, where every day I notice the lonely farmers and haunted cowboys. Their constant companion is nature, and some of them are no less lonely than apartment dwellers or carefully planned suburban children.

Death, of course, frequently benumbs those whose loved ones it removes, leavinc them with the pervasive void called loneliness. It interrupts

Says author McMurtry: Tloo of the loneliest people I know are a couple who have been married for nearly 30 years."

many long-sustained dialogues the survivor may discover that he or she really only knew how to talk to one particular person. The loneliness that descends when the answering voice has been stilled is often so profound that, to fight it, many people continue their conversations and make up the responses they might have gotten. ^ grandfather, who had a lively curiosity, would often meet my father at the back

Good** marriages as well as large and seeming stable families harbor some of the loneliest people aUve,

gate when my father came home from dates or errands. Even several years after my grandfather died, my father expected to hear his dads questions whenever he got to the gate.

The root condition of loneliness the lack.of a sense of human closeness and conneaion may n(H change much from age to age, but the textures of loneliness do change. In the Western world, at least, most people can now have a televised human image to watch and a human voice to listen to whenever they want. For many, television is not so much a provider of entertainment as it is of company.

Ifor example, 1 know a man who operates a parking lot in a grim part of a large city. All day he parks cars for people he doesn't know. In his tiny booth

he has a tiny TV set which he rushes b:k to as soon as hes finished parking a car. He knows few of his customers, even the regulars, by name, but if you pause to chat for a moment and reveal even a modest knowledge of the soaps, he will discuss all the actors at length, calling them by their first names or their nicknames. He is living proof of a point that film critic Renata Adler made once: In a time of extreme mobility and discontinuity, TV soap operas and series provide many pwple with all they are likely to have in the way of long-term relationships.

Another instrument that has altered the texture of contemporary loneliness is the telephone. For those affluent enoL^h to use it without inhibition, it provides almost unlimited opportunities for talk. It creates and sustains friendships, thereby linking the disparate fragments of many modem lives. However, many of those p^ple affluent enough to talk long distance for hours on the phone remain uneasy with the Instrument, one reason being, perhaps, that if one has to pay for talk, somehow it is cheapened, or rendered unauthentic.

Long ago I developed what 1 think of as a mature pluralism in r^ard to telephone friends. The limitations of tele phone friendship fi^uently encourage conversational intimacies that would immediately dry up should faceteface contact occur. I think of this as the Kafka and Felice ^drome; We owe a great correspondence to the fact that those two loved better when they wrote than when they met.

On the other hand, I have plenty of friends with whom the phone inaeases

contact and in no way diminishes the pleasure of visits. I use the phone as habitually as I use food, seldom passing a day without talking to five or six people in various parts of the country; it is chiefly because of the telephone that I so seldom feel lonely.

5^ Of course, I have had oppressively lonely moments. Once, I started across the Oklahoma panhandle, possibly the most forlorn stretch of land in America, at dusk on a winter day. It is not very far across the Oklahoma panhandle, but then loneliness doesnt reckon in miles. Theres too dem much of this nothing," a character in one of my novels says. For him, as for me that evening, those barren plains had an isolating force: they remind one viscerally that human company can suddenly recede beyond the darkening horizon. For the severely lonely, that human company has already receded far beyond any horizon they feel themselves likely to reach.

My long experience as a more or less single parent has left me firmly convinced that loneliness is intensified by failed expectations. Most sir^e parents become lonely due to the failure of major expectations about the way their lives will be lived, and most of them replay those expectations in fantasy on a steady basis. The wider the gap grows between the full domesticity of their fantasies and the anemic routines of their lives, the lonelier they feel.

Expectations do not always feil. They can be fulfilled, exhausted and forgotten. Married people can simply use up their interest in one another. Two of the loneliest people 1 know are a couple who have b^n married for nearly 30

4 Family Weekly December i i i963





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December Tl. 1983In The Area

Pastor's Anniversary Noted

Members of Corey s Chapei Free Will Baptist Church will celebrate their pastors anniversary with services Monday through Sunday.

The following churches and ministers will be present: Monday, the Rev. Elmer Jackson and Elm Grove Free Will Baptist; Tuesday, the Rev, Charles Parker and Cherry Lane Free Will Baptist; Wednesday, Dr. W.L. Jones and Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist; Thursday, the Rev. Clifton Gardper and Selvia Chapel Free Will Baptist; and Friday, the Rev./Tyrone Turnage and Little Creek Free Will Baptist. Services will start nightly at 7; 30.

Telethon Chairman Announced

Telethon chairmen for the Weekend With the Stars Telethon for Cerebral Palsy to be held in Greenville Jan. 14-15 have been announced by coordinator Rita Rasberry. These are:

Ay cock Concert Scheduled

Band, orchestra and vocal music students at E.B. Aycock Junior High School will present their mid winter concert following a brief Parent-Teacfiers Association meeting Monday at 7 p.m. in the gymnasium.

I Chuck Allen. Lori Lloyd and Patty Hiss will direct the performance. Refreshments will be served at 8; 15 p.m.

GUC Meets Tuesday

" The Greenville Utilities Commission will meet Tuesday at 7:3o p.m. at the Utilities Building at the intersection of Fifth and Washington streets Included on the agenda for consideration are adjustments to water and sewer rates and a report on load management operations and savings.

VIP in-town, Connally Branch; VIP out-of-town, Dick Jones; Special events groups - clubs, churches, Debbie Avery; East Carolina University, Carol Davis; businesses, Beth Heeter; out-of-town, Mary Ludwig.

Publicity, Bob Myers; finance, Ed Stanely; fishbowl, Barbara Turner and Anne Askew; phones, Bernie Stanley; volunteers, Barbara Zicherman and Grigg Denton; celebrity panel, Dick Blake; food, Jim Terrell^

Supplies, Jeff Campbell; VIP host, Paul Rasberry; VIP hostess, Kay Warren; set design, Kathy Lasky, Cynthia Flynn, Lynn Coghill; programming, Barbara Thurber; talent, Brett Watson, Stuart Aronson, Betty Topper; decorating, Billy Stinson; medical assistance, Craig Quick and Molly Byrd.

Help is still needed on these committees. Anyone wishing to serve should contact the Icoal telethon office at 756-5390.

Bishop To Conduct Service

Bishop Ariester Coward of New Haven, Conn., will conduct services at Wells Chapel Church of God in Christ, corner of Fifth and Hudson streets, today at 12:30 p.m.

He will be accompanied by^the Gospel Choir and ushers of St. James United Holiness Church of New Haven. The Wells Chapel Hospitality Group is sponsoring the service.

Bishop Coward is a Greenville native.

The Greenville Police Departments Crime Prevention Officer will provide, a security inventory at your home on request . You will be advise on proper locks, burglary prevention and safety measures. Call 752-3342 for more information.

All's fare in love, war, and traffic.

(756-0088)

_J

Kiwanians Honor Gray

Edwin Gray was named "Kiwanian of the Year at the annual awards banquet of the University City Kiwanis Club recently.

Chet Emerson was presented the clubs Recognition Award. Merit Awards were given to Allen Reed and Don Brown.

Com..mittee awards for exceptional service-werfr presented to five committee chairmen: Craig Smith, Floyd Little. Griff Garner, Tom Perkins and Glenn Fisher. Recognition was given to four members for special achievement: Dean Wilkerson, Blount Modlin, Les Garner and Guilford Worsely.

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Pactolous Elementary students in grades kindergarten tjifough four will present the musical Boo Bears Christmas" at the schools Parent-Teacher Organization meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. The fifth grade will also present a musical version of The Night Before Christmas.

Open House Scheduled

An open house for Parents without Partners will be held at St. Peters Church Hall Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.

Parents without Partners is a non-profit, non-sectarian organization for the benefit of all single parents and their children. Custody of children is not necessary. Children may attend.

Senior Games Scheduled

Chapter To Hold Supper

The Coastal Plains chapter of the Epilepsy Association of .North Carolina will hold its annual covered-dish supper Dec. 15 at the Pitt County Mental Health Center located adjacent to Pitt County Memorial Hospital on Stantonsburg Road.

The meeting is free and open to anyone who wants to know more about epilepsy and seizure disorders. Participants may bring a covered dish. Mary Nieber of the Charlotte Epilepsy .Vssucjation will he thfispeaker-

For more information about the chapter or a ride, call 7.5(i-37()9 and leave a message on the recorder. For additional information you may call the toll-free Epilepsy Information .Service at 1-800-642-0500.

The first Greenville-Pitt County Senior Games will be held April 11, sponsors of the program have announced.

The games, designed for citizens 55 years old and above, include competition in events including archery, swimming, shuffleboard, walking and running. Clinics, workshops and general programs will be held throughout the year locally for interested senior citizens. The program is sanctioned by the North Carolina Senior Games Advisory Board.

Sponsors include the health, physical education, recreation and safety departments at East Carolina University, Greenville Recreation and Parks and Pitt County Community Schools. Beginning in 1985, local winners will be able to qualify for the statewide Senior Games.

participants aiid volunteers for the event are needed, say sponsors. For further information call Alice Keene at 752-6106, Karen Hancock at 757-6484 or Margaret McGlohon at 752-4137.

Gymhastics Class Beginning

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will offer a new session of gymnastics for youth beginning Jan. 2 at Elm Street Center.

Preschoolers will meet on Monday and Wednesdays from 4 to 4:30 p.m. for six weeks. Fee is $20. Advanced beginners will meet Monday, Wednesday and Fridays from 4:30 to 5:15. Fee is $30. Intermediates will meet Wednesdays and Friday from 5:15 to 6 p.m; Fee is $25.

Registration is necessary and will be held Tuesday *at Elm Stret Center from 4 to 6 p.m. For more information, call April Maxam at 752-9432.

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Church Drama Scheduled

A two-hour church drama. "Christmas Triumph. written

by Eugene Joyner, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 17-18 at Evangelistic Tabernacle Church, at 264 Bypass West and

I .aughinghomse Drive. No admission will be charged.

The scope of Christmas Triumph covers the life of Jesus (hrist from his birth in the manger at Bethlehem to his crucifixion and resurrection. The theme woven into the narrative and music of the play is because hes alive, I live."

The cast for the drama numbers 20. with seven major roles. Performers in the lead roles are Robbie Gurganus, Kathy Joyner. Mike Whaley, Ann Pearce, Faye Bland. Guy Buck and Heather Pierce

The play will ^ co-direcled by Ms. Pearce and Joyner, with David Williams responsible for the sound which is a composite of church songs as well as music from a wide

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Pre-4-H youth from Pitt County' received ribbons and certificates for their 1983 project work at the annual awards program held recently.

Blue ribbons recognizing excellent work were given to the following youth: Lauri Briley, Chad Evenhuis. Amanda Hudson. Cassie Briley. Heather Evenhuis. DeShawn Thompson, Veronica Harris. Carmita Coward. Jayme Bell, Denise Gardner. Michelle Pugh. Tasleema LaCralta. Maurice Ellison, Chris Smith, Kendra Williams. Demetrius Move, Fred Phillips, Triffin Daniel and Delisa Moore.

Donna Hatcher, dental hygienist for Pitt County, presented a program on dental health to the students.

Dale Panero, 4-H extension agent, said 101 projects were completed by Pre-4-Hers in 1983. ^I'he Pre-4-H program has grown a great deal in Greenville and Pitt County from its beginning almost five years ago, said Panero. We expect thp nrngrsm to continue to grow in [984.

Gospel Concert Planned

The Pitt-Greene Interdenominational Choir will present a concert of gospel music Sunday at 5 p.m. at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church on West Eighth Street.

Ervin Crisp, a former singer with the Harmonizing Pour and the Soul Stirrers, will appear on the program. The concert will be sponsored by the Pitt County chapter of the North Carolina A&T Alumni Association, with the proceeds to be used for scholarships at A&T State University.

Revival Starts Monday

, Revivial services will be conducted this week at Deliverance Mission Outreach Church in Farmville beginning at 7:3i.) p.m. each night.

The following persons are scheduled to speak: Monday. Elder Rickv Council; Tuesday, the Rev. A.J. Clark; Wednesday.Elder Ronnie Purvis; Thursday, the Rev. Rebecca Bernard; Friday. Elder Jackie Barrett, and Sunday, .[he Rev. Ronnie .McNair.

Ostomy Group To Meet

The Greenville chapter of the United Ostomy Association will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. for a buffet dinner at the First Christian Churchfellowship hall.

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The Roxy members will meet at the Greenville Community Building on Greene Street Monday at 7:30 p.m. The agenda will include election of officers and plans for the new year.

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Noah E. Eddie Hardison, a Williamston businessman, took the oath of office for a first term on the board, and Thurman C. Perry, who in the past served as a town commissioner for -18 years, is back on the board after being defeated in the 1982 elections.

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CAN YOU KONA CREDIT UNION?

By Merrie Spaeth

In the past ue years, weve heard more and more about a piador kind of financial intitution, the credit union (CU.). The term can be misleackng, however. To fnd out more about how credit unions work for their more than 47 million members, Family Weekly spoke to Margaret Sprouse, manner of Lam^miiaies, a fcGt-growing credit union based at Catholic University in Washington, D.C.

Q: Ms. Sprouse, what exactly is a credit union?

A: Its a unique financial in^^on: In some ways it seems to funoTOB like a bank, but its actually a cooperative. That is, the members who deposit their money own and govern the C.U.

^ Is there any risk when you put your money in a C.U.?

A: No more than in any other financial institution. C.U.s are regulated by state and Federal Government agencies, and they are audited regularly. Also, accounts are insured up to $100,000.

Q: Are the services that C.U.s offer like those of a regular bank?

A: Well, banks vary a lot, and C.U.s do, too, depending on their size. In general, they ofier savings aaounts called lare accounts at CU.s and share drafts, which are like NOW accounts, that is, checking accounts that pay interest on monq^ Idt in the account. They also offer Individual Retirement Accounts, ceitificaes of deposit, credit cards, payrolkleduction options, and, of course, we loan money to depositors.

Q; It sounds exactly like a bank.

A: But its not exactly the same. First, C.U.s are nonprofit. And the cooperative feature is an original idea. Its fre-qu^tly easier for a member to ^ a loan from a C.U. than from a local bank because the credit oonunittee knows the member and can assess his determination to pay back the loan. And the interest rates are frequently less than those at a bank.

Q; Does a member give up anything ^ joining?

A; Some CU.s may be open only at certain times, and I suppose that could be an inconvenience in this day of 24-hour banking. But because the CU. is usually right on the sponsors premises, its quite accessible.

Q; How does someone drtermine if he can join a credit union?

A: Well, there are about 20,000 CU.s in the country today. Thqrre organized Iw people with    in    osnnKm,

and there are all kini^: C.U.s for employees of a company or, like us, for

employees of institutions of hi^er education: get^raphical C.U.s for certain scions of a dty or rural area: church CU.s. You have to be in the field of interest to join one, but there are so

many that the first thing to do is ask around. IW

Metrie Spaeth is a freeiance writer umh a master's degree in business administration.

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C Sunday. December 11.1983

Walston Lead Rose

By WOODY PKEl.K Keflector Sports Editor HOLLYWOOD - Tyrone Smith and Mac Walston each scored 14 points in leading Rose High School to a 61-44 triumph over D.H. Conley Friday night. It marked the second time the Rampants had downed the \'ikings - and it also marked their second win in tour starts Earlier in the evening. Conley s girls rallied and took a 42-:2 win over the winless Rampettes.

The Rampants, shooting close to .tO percent in the first halt, rolled up a 19-point hafltime edge but weren't able to do much more with it as the tinal halt became a toul-shootrng affair, marred by a number of turnovers as both ieam^.jwent J the lull-court press.

But the play ot the Rampants m the first half was enough to do the job i don't know how in the world they were picked to tinish last in the Big East'/' Conle\ Coach Shelly .Marsh, said, 'it they play the rest ot iheir game> with as much emotion, and get as much emuiion trom their crowd tans . the} re going to beawtulh hardlobeat "1 really thought that we played good dekm>e in the-first half, t'ut they still shot nearly .in percent It was just an 'in your tace' thing in the first halt"

Not that the Vikings didn't iiave Iheir chances lb'get into

the contest. While turnovers and rebounding caused Conley to fall behind early, the Vikings still had a chance to do something in the second period when, trailing by 12. Conlev missed 12 consa'utive field goal attempts, six ot them layups. Rose, in the meanwhile, scored only seven points to up its lead to 19.

'If you can't hit layups, you'renot going to be in the game. ' Marsh moaned afterwards "We got the ball inside, but we couldn't do much with It 1 did think we played good defense, but they just put It in anyway "

Conley was badly outre-boundc'ii in the contest. 4H-3:L and Marsh said he didn t really expect anything that bad 'We re not going to tbe boards well. Darryl Daniels IS the only biginan weW goT ^ who's working hdf'd on both ends ot the court Louis Bryant got six rebounds, but they were all on the ottensive end.",

B'rvant was also the only , VikiRg in double figures with

Smith. Rose got buckets from Walston and Smith to ease the lead out to nine. 14-5. and the Rampants held that margin the rest of the period which ended at 18-9.

Rose scored the first six points of the second quarter to

run out to a 24-9 lead, but Conley cut it back to 24-12 before going into its cold spell. During that time. Rose got four free throws from Smith, a driving layup by Walston and a free throw from Wilson to run the lead out to 31-12 with

1:12 left in the period, which then ended with Rose up. 33-14.

But in the third period. thinK got somewhat out of hani Conley was able to cut the lead to as little as 14 during the early going of the

14 points Conley, scored tirst. but Ro>e tied It at 2-2. then took a 4-;f lead on a baseline jumper by Jeti Hopkins Conley never caught up again jCari ton Wilson tollowed with a jumper and Walston hit two tree throws tollowed by another Wilson basket off a rebound that made it to,-:; wyith 2;5:)lett inthepc'fiod.

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period, thanks to its press., but Rose pulled back out on six straight points by Gary Scott, followed by two free throws each by Smith and Walston to make it 49-28 with 35 seconds left in the quarter. Conley got the final^ two baskets, however, to trim it to 49-32 at the horn.

Rose was troubled by eight turnovers during the period after having just nine in the first half, 'i don't know what it is about the third period." Rose Coach Jim Brewington said. "We seem to have trouble in the third period in every game. We talk about it at halftime, trying to stress to play under control and not haw a lot of turnovers, but we still come out and have that kind of a quarter."

Early in the final period. . Cnn|ey trimmed the lead to as little as 14 at 51-38 with 5:34 left, but Rose got five points from Hopkins'over the next two minutes to push back out by 18 and that all but finished it

Rose shot poorly in the final period and finished with a 44.7 percentage. Conley hit only percent tor the game and

Please turn to page B

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Hose forward .Mac Walston (42) drives between J).IE Conleys Hegsi<* Smith (.50) and (ilenn Clemons (14)

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Martina Wins Australian

MELBiH HNE. .Australia .AF - Kathy Jordan said it wa.< like lacing a steam roller alter .Martina- Navratilova won the Australian Open's women/; title tor the second timeinthree.years.

The world's top-ranked woman player served and volleyed with power lor a 6-2. 7-6 victory today over her American compatriot

"I tried mainly to slay with her." said Jordan. "Itstie gets a break early she starts rolling-steam rolling.'^ Navratilova, who picked up

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983    B-7Edwards Ignites Rams Past Hawks

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer SNOW HILL - Theodore ^Edwards fired in 26 points and grabbed 18 rebounds to lead Greene Central to a 67-41 romp over North Lenoir Friday in a non-conference 3-A division basketball matchup.

Edwards capped the night with a soaring slam dunk with *1:09 left in the game to give the Rams a 63-39 margin over the Hawks.

North Lenoirs girls overcame a 7-2 first quarter .deficit to claim a 49-37 victory over Greene Central, as Jennifer Wooten paced the Lady Hawks with 10 points. Allison Battle led the Lady Rams with ; 11 points.

Point guard Boneree Johnson, playing in just his second game since returning from academic ineligibility, pumped in 12 points for .Greene Centra 1. Larry Johnson came off the bench to lead North Lenoir with 14 points, while Jimmv Core had 12. .

Theodore had a good game

tonight as far as scoring and rebounding, Greene Central Coach Lewis Godwin said, But I think he played better against Beddingfield (Tuesday) than he did tonight,

. I thought Boneree Johnson did a good job running the offense for just his second game until they started to press-then he left us,

Greene Central rattled off the first 10 points of the game before the Hawks finally got on the board with 5:16 left in the opening Quarter. North Lenoir trimmea the margin to three on a pair of free throws by Core with 1:03 on the clock, but the Rams spread the gap to 16-9 with a field goal by Elmer Dixon and a 23-foot jumper by Mike Fulton at the buzzer.

The Rams continued to pull away in the second period, as North Lenoir shot a miserable 19 percent from the field in the first half while scoring just 15 points. Greene Central led 31-15 at halftime.

But the third quarter belonged to North Lenoir, as

the Hawks used a trapping zone defense to confuse the Rams into turnovers. The Hawks outscored the Rams 12-6 through the 2:12 mark of the period and cut the gap to 37-27 before Edwards connected for the Rams.

Javver score: Greene Central 63, North Lenoir 45

Girls (iame North Lenoir (4fl)

Phillippe 1 4-5 6, Wooten 4 1-2 9, Cratch 4 O-l 8, J Wooten 4 2-2 10, Chapman 4 1-2 9. King 3 1-2 7, Doucette 0 0-0 0, Totals 2 9-1119. Greene Central Cti)

Battle 5 1-2 11, S. Wilkes 0 2-5 2, Bowen 2 3-6 7, A. Wilkes 2 I-l 5, Hicks 2 4-4 8, Jones 2 0-0 4, Myatt 0 (M)0 Totals 13 11-1837.

North Lenoir 2 12 11 2119

Greene Central 7    3 II 16:17

Boys Game North Lenoir (HI McPhail 1 0-0 2. Core 4 4-6 12, Davenport 0 0-0 0, L. Johnson 7 0-0 14, J. Johnson 3 0-0 6, Jones 0 o-o 0, Garner 0 0-0 0, Wooten 2 1-2 5, C, Edwards 0 0-0 0, Garner 1 0-0 2, BranchOO-00. Totals 18.5-811. Greene Central (67)

Barnes 21-3 5. B. Johnson 6 0-112,

Thompson 31-17. t. Edwards lH-7 26, Warren 1 0-0 2, Sanders 0 0-0 0. Fulton 3 0-0.6, M. Edwards 2 1-2 5. Dixon 1 0-0 2, Williams 1 0-0 2, Hin.son 0 o-o 0. Totals 30 7-1167.

North Lenoir  9    6    16    1011

Greene Central... 16 1.5 12 2>167

baseline for a jumper, and Johnny Johnson stole an errant pass and drove for a layup as the Hawks rallied for a 39-31 deficit with 1:22 left in the quarter. But the Rams fired in a pair of field goals in the final 31 seconds for a 43-31 advantage.

A 17-foot jumper by Larry Johnson with 4:26 left in the game cut the Rams lead to 49-39, but Edwards scored eight of 14 unanswered points for Greene Central over the next 3:30.

We eot in their eame in the

third period, Godwin said. I told them that if we kept hurrying our passes, we'd get beat. When we got a lead. I think our inexperience showed. Instead of building on that lead. I think we were thinking blowout and let thein come back.

f f

The Lady Hawks suffered through a miserable first quarter but bounced back in the second to take a 14-10 lead at intermission. North Lenoir pulled out an 18-10 lead 1:30 into the third quarter, but the

Lady Rams whittled the lead to 22-21 with 2:57 left.

North Lenoir scored six unanswered points to close out the period with a 28-21 lead.

Greene Centrals Cyndi Hicks sank four free throws in the first minute of the fourth quarter to trim the margin to 30-25. Wooten and point guard Dee Dee Phillippe helped the Lady Hawks pull out a 42-31 lead with 2:25 left in the game, and the Rams were forced to foul while applying' pressure on defense.

"I thought our defense

played well in the first quarter. Greene Central Coach Brenda Dail said. But in the second quarter. 1 felt like it got away from us. When you look at the game overall, (the margin) never got to double figures until we started putting pressure on in the fourth quarter.

I feel like the games we've played so far were not an accurate test of what we can do. J don't like losing non-cdhference games, hut 1 feel like in the long run a tough game like this will help us '

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(Continued from page B-6) was only 45.5 at t)ie stripe. Rose was 19 of 28 for 67.9 percent.    '>

In addition to Smith and Walston hitting 14. Hopkins had 10 for Rose, now 2-2 on the year. Conley falls to 1-3.

D.ll. Conley, with two of its regular starters on the bench at the tipoff. fell behind the Rose girls, and trailed most of the first half. Coach Joy Riddick did not start either Mechio Kornegay or Karen Barrett, and said afterwards that it was to give some of the other players a chance to play more.

But it was the play of those two - especially in the second half that sparked the Conley rally.

I don't think they played well in the first half, but we had a talk in the dressing room. I gave (the team) a little forceful persuasion to do the job, Riddick said.

We had a good third quarter, and that's the best basketball weve played this year. We played good, aggressive defense and we ran the fast break well, something we've been wanting to do.

_ Despite the fact that Rose led throughout most of the first half. Riddick felt that Rose played its best ball in the second period after her two usual starters returned to the court. 1 think they were a little surprised at the lineup. Then when the other girls came in they started playing good team ball. We didnt hustle in the first half, but we did in the seqpnd and that won

Rose scored the first two baskets of the second period-by Woolard and Niansa Outlaw - to up the lead to 13-8.

then finally lead by six. 17-11 on a basket by Pam Smith. But Conley rallied to trim the lead back to 19-17 at halftime, LRose moved back out by four at 23-19 before Kornegay and Barrett suddenly sparked the revival of the Valkyries. Over the next ten minutes, Conley outscored Rose 20-2 and pushed out into a 39-25 lead. Kornegay scored eight of those points while Angela Smith added nine.

That put the game away for the Valkyries.

We got a little tired through our top seven. Rose Coach Dennis Gibson said. They began to press us and we panicked. Once we calmed down we started playing well again, but the damage was done.

Kornegay led the Conley

,IV (;anie: Hose 70, Conley 56 iiirls

Rose CI2)

Parrot! 1 0-2 2. Lambing 0 0-0 0, Humphrev 0 (H) 0. Richardson 3 1-4 7, Carmoh :! o-o 6. Woolard 3 0-0 6, Holec 0 0-0 0, Trevathan 0 0-0 0, Smith 2 0-0 4, Outlaw 2 3-4 7, Drewery 00-00. Totals 14 4-1032. (onlev(12)

Mills 1 2-4 4. Boyd 1 0-0 2, Credle 0 0-0 0, Smith 4 1-1 9, Chipman 2 1-4 5, Barrett 2 2-4 6, Harrison 0. (M) 0, Patrick 0 0-0 0, Kornegay 6 2-2 14, Jackson 0 2-4 2, Keeter 0 0-0 0, Totals 16 Il)-I9 42

Rose......................9 I" 6 7^:i2

Conley...................8 9 17 812

Boys Game

Rose (611 Joyner 0 0-0 0, T Harris 1 (H) 2, Jordan 0 0-0 0, Bost 1 0-0 2. T. Smith 3 8-8 14, M Harris 0 0-1 0, Barnes 0 0-0 0. Scott 2 4-4 8. Wilson 4 1-5 9. Walston 5 4-4 14, Hammond I 0-1 2, Mayo 0 0-0 0. Hopkins 4 2-5 10. Totals 21 19-28 61.

Conlev (44)

Barnes 10-1 2, Credle 2 1-2 5, Mills 0 0-1 0, Wilson 0 0-0 0, Edwards 1 0-2 2, Anderson 1 0-0 2. Reddrick 0 0-0 0, Coward 0 0-0 0. Holloman 2 0-0 4, Clemmons 0 4-5 4, Smith 1 1-2'3. Daniels 4 0-0 8, Dawson 0 0-2 0, Bryant 5 4-7 14. Totals 17 10-22 11.

Rose...................18    15    16    1261

Conlev.................9    3    18    1244

scoring with 14. while no one hit double figures for Rose.

The loss dropped the Rose girls to 0-4, while Conley is now 4-0.

Rose plays host to North Pitt on Tuesday, while Conley travels to Farmville Central.

' sears

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday. December 11,1983

After 58 Years Together, tortoise And His Owner Are Best

B\ PKNNV SP\K DAVIS, Calif. L'PI > - Spring for most people arrives with blossoming flowers, birds singing in the trees or first love Steve Carlson. 64. knows it's spring when his tortoise Nicodemus wakes up from his long winter hibernation in a metal trash can filled with strips ot paper "Come the spring, we 11 hear his toenails clanking on the sides of that can and know he s awake again. " says Carlson.

Nicodemus. a female despite her name, has be*en with Carlson since he uas a 6-vearold bo\ in in.'.i and lound the CFeatUFe-burro\URg-!ntJj.;i.>aad-dune tn~Venice-r Call!

He figures* someone tiMik the reptile from the .Mojave Desert, its native habitat, and then either lost it or discarded it.

The desert tortoise, the otticial Calitornia reptile, is a protected species due to its de,i;lmmg population The Legislature in 197;5 made it illegal tor anjone to take a tortoise out of the desert, but permitted the state Deartment of Fish and Game to issue tortoise license^ 21.CL ot them - to people who already owned one Nicodemus'license has worn oil with age In fact, so many years ha\e passed that Carlson can t remember why he named his hard-shelled ilesert triend Nicodemus. But he does recall with amusement - how he -discovered the tortoise-was a sbe^d not a .he

"It was in the spring of l%n or so hen .\ick came, out ot hibernation and we discovered he had laid throe eggs. Carlson recalled What are you to do Call him Harriet'. He's still Nick to us.

Carlson, a reUred admmi.strator tor the Cniversity ot California Cooperative extension, still mixes up the pronouns

It's been a harrowing hie or Nicodemus lii the liCos she fell six . or seven leet dov.n :,n;o ..the-Carlson s liasement. cracking her shell Carlson's mother applied disintectent to the bleeding crack, taped it Hiut and now the Iracture is invisible.

used to be." Carlson said; he thinks Nicodemus eyesight has begun to fail.

There's no way of telling exactly how old Carlson's tortoise is because its shell was already fully developed at 12 inches long when it became part of the Carlson household.

John Brode. a biologist with the state Department of Fish and Game, says it takes at least 20 years for a tortoise to reach maturity, so Nicodemus is at least 80 years old. and possibly more than 100. The desert tortoise may reach 150.

It's against the law for pet sho[is to sell desert tw toises or for anyone to sell them privately However, tortoise owners are allowed to give the creatures away or "wiH them to members of their own family.

That's what Carlson plans to do with Nicodemus Both of his daughters. Terri. 29. and Kristi. 28, wouldn't mind having her.

"Nicodemus has become as significant as anyone else in the household." Carlson said.

Tortoise owners also have the option of turning their reptiles over to a statewide organization called "Turtle and Tortoise Education and Adoption Media. "

Felice Rood, who heads the "TEAM chapter in Sacramento, has about 50 turtles and tortoises in her backyard orphanage.

"The youngest are just a couple of weeks old that I hatched fjom eggs.''^Mrs. Rood said

Several times the tortoise e>ca[Kd the (arl.-on s yard, but

each time she was cornered and reiurne_    -.    ......

"But she's not as interested today in getting away as she

Carlson's 59-year ownership of Nicodemus could be a record, she said. "The longest I've ever heard of before is about 20 or 30 years." she said.

Carlson said Nicodemus responds when her name is called, "althpugh that could just be because he associates it with food."

During the six months of spring and summer that Nicodemus lives in her turtle hut built .50 years ago. she munches lettuce, cabbage, rose petals or grass. She fills up on a pint or two of water only once or twice a year, receiving enough liquid nourishment the rest of the time from her leafy food.

Then, as her lumbering walk slows to a crawl and the weather turns cool, Carlson tears mounds of newspapers into strips, stjulis them into a metal trash can and Jets Nicodemus sleep through the winter.

Best Friend

Steve Carlson, 64, of Davis, Calif., holds his life-long pet, Niccdcmus, a desert icrtsisc he found in 1925 when he was a boy of 6. It wasnt until some 40 years later that he discovered the tortoise was a she and not a he. Carlsons hard-shelled friend is at least 80 years old. (CPI Photo)

First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector

752-3952

Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.

JustSay t ChaigelK^SB

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729 Dickinson Ave.*752-4417 West End Cnter756-9371

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Officials Endorse National For Drive Safety

Program

During 1982. 95,492 person.s were arrested lor driving under the influence ot alcohol in North Carolina Ot the 144,543 reported traliic ac cidents in the state m last year. 21,896 were known to be j alcohol related while another ! j 6,514 were suspected ot lieing alcohol related, according to i state statistics.

In the collisions known to be alcohol related. 381 people were killed and another 13.510were injured, while 418 people died and 3,591 were injured in the alcohol-su^cted accidents.

TTiose figures caused (;apl Carl Gilchrist. Highway Patrol Troop A commander, and Greenville Police Chiel Ted Holmes to voice support for the observance ot National Drunk and Drugged Driver Awareness Week, which begins Sunday Both Holmes and Gilchrist j -lave Md their officers to get drltiWflg drivers olf the toids.

The state's new Safe Roads

Act, which wen,t into effect Oct 1. raised the legal drinking age from 18 to 19. and provides stiller penalties tor persons convicted ot .driving alter drinking or taking drugs.

The olticers said increased enlorcement and stifter penalties are not enough. Holmes said public awareness of the problem and cooperation in keeping drinking ptmsons from driving arc needed

"In January 1982. when an Air Florida plane crashed m Washington. D C , killing 70 people, the entire country agonized over the tragic loss ot lite. and investigations were begun immediately to determine what hapjiened so similar accidents could be avoided,' Holmes said.

"About the same number ot people are killed each day on highways across the nation in alcohol-related collisions, but those deaths go virtually unnoticed, except by their relatives."

Gilchrist pointed to drinking among young people as a growing problem.

He said 31 percent of the people arrested for driving under the influence in 1982 were in the 16-to-24 age group, although they account for only 21 percent of the total number' of licensed drivers.

Although it is too early to predict the long-term effects of the new driving while impaired law, Gilchrist said the law seems to have had an impact so far.

In October 1983, Highway Patrol troopers in the state made 3.878 arrests for driving under the influence, while in October 1983. 2,833 arrests a 26.9 percent decrease - were made.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983 g.y

IW  Houses For Sale

^TIFUL country home *if

9" *    Cltonn    built

ranch, larga front porch, spacious graaf room, firaplaca, bookshelves, arm rack, kitchen and dining combination, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, ^ble car garage. Deck, above around swimminopool. $85,000. Call ^si-wOO, nights Mary 7S8-1W7, Lyle 756-2904.

^LVEDERE. New construction, 1500 square foot brick ranch that flreatroom with fireplace. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths. Call

in i lJ'Rl" * Associates, nights Rod Tugwell 753-

4302.

iCK VENER RANH (10 3/4% or to 3/5% loan to qualltied buyer). Carport, large lot, 3 bedrooms, 1'? baths, large kitchen with utility, area. About 6 miles from Pitt Plaza. Neat neighborhood. Only $41,500. Call Davis Realty, 752-3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904.

'*NER 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, fireplace, fenced backyard and patio. !l!:% sssumsbis mortgage. Asking price of $72,000. Assumable amount SS8,700. 107 Azalea Drive 756 8281 or 752 4844

BY OWNER, GREENVILLE loca tion, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, double urage, huge den, immaculate. Immediate occupancy. $66,900. Call 746-2778. No Brokers please

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, IVz baths, living room, kitchen/dining com blnaflon, fenced in backyard, carport. Corner lot. Excellent loca tIon. 355 2461 from 9-5;30; after 6, 756-0652 or 355 2414.

BY OWNER. Nice FMHA brick home. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Located on Highway 13, 8 miles from Greenville. Nice neighborhood. Phone 1-745 3891.

BV owner. 3 bedrooms, IW baths, urage,- living room with fireplace, dining room, sundeck, and fenced in backyard. 222 Commerce Street. Low $50'S. Phone 756 7776.

BY OWNER. Cherry Oaks. Nearly 3M0 square feet in this spacious 4 level spill. Immaculate! 4 bedrooms, 2'j baths, family room .with Dare IV fireplace, living room .with fireplace, eat-in kitchen, din

.Ing room, Intercom, double garage, .patios, plus 30x19 English Tudor Rec. room. All of this on heavily 4wooded % acre privacy lot. Low tIOO's. Shown by appointment, 756-8936, No realtors please!

CAN'T SEEM TO SAVE enough jnoney for a down payment on a j>ew home! You don't have to have a down payment with Miles Homes. *6ulld It yourself with pre cut, qualify, energy efficient materials. 9.9% 'APR financing. 848-3220, collect.

XHERRY OAKS. Superior story-and-a-haif home which also has an -In-law apartment. Traditional style, -all formal areas, 4 bedrooms. 3 tiaths, huge deck, large wooded lot. Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500. Jean Hopper, 756 9142

CHERRY OAKS. This ranch style home Is a notch above! Large, roomy, comfortable. Youll love the 'floor plan that features all formal

109

Houses For Sale

ESTATE REALTY CO.

752-5058

TWO BEDROOM home with large living room, fireplace, nice kitchen and dining area. Vfurry and we may be able to get a low interest loan -only $4) ,900.

COLLEGE COURT price re ducedl! Three bedrooms, living room with fireplace, huge kitchen, family room, detached two-car ^r^. The area's best buy for only

WESTWOOD - spacious throe

bedroom home, fireplace in living room with heat exchanger, kitchen with breakfast room area, patio with built'in grill. Call for other details. A good buy for $59,900.

COUNTRY HOME 15 minutes west. Brick ranch with three bedrooms, spacious kitchen. Craft insert to eliminate fuel bills. Fenced backyard with garage and swim mln^^ool. Exclusivo listing - only

COUNTRY HOME - 10 minutes south. Vey attractive home with three bedrooms, formal living and dining, family room with fireplace insert. Large shop on 1.57 wooded acres. Possible Feaderal Land Bank financing. Call now - $74.900.

Billy Wilson 758 4476

Jarvlsor Dorlis Mills 752 3647

FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, approximately 6 miles from hospital. .8 acre. 2,856 square feet. 4 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, living room, sunken great room, family room, carport, patio. 1,120 square foot workshop^ Assumable 8% Jlrsi mortgage. Call 756-7111.

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

LOVELY WOODED LOT In Brook Valley. Thid -tot Is loaded with shrubs, dogwood and azaleas. Large ranch features big formal living and dining areas, great kitchen and eating area, den with fireplace, three very large bedrooms, two full baths. Double garage and storage. $98,500. 122 King George Road.

IMMACULATE IN EVERY DE TAIL. Unbelievable two story In

109

Houme For Sale

FOR SALE BY Owner, 2 bedroom

or could be 3 bedrooms or den. Vtry good condition. $34,000. 758-3218 10 Tor756-4199aer5.

ORIFTON. Custom built, all formal areas Including sunken living roorn, slate foyer, eat in kitchen, separate laundry room, garage. Excep tlohal! AidridM & Southerland, 756-3500. Jean Hopper, 756-9142.

HOI HOI HOI Santa savs this is a terrific buy and it's eligible for the N.C. Housing money! Cute as a button, great condition.$40 s. Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500.

JINGLE BELLS all the way to this new listlim in Weatherington Heights. 'Tnree bedrooms, 1'/$ baths, living room, eat-ln kitchen, carport and fenced yard for only 342,900. Hlgnite, Realtors. 757-1969 anytime.    _

LEASE THIS RANCH with option to buy! Pretty home on quiet cul-de sac. Call for details. Hignlte, Realtors. 757-1969 anytime.

LYNNDALE Best buy in the best area! All formal areas plus office and play room. Master bedroom downstairs, 3 bedrooms up-Excellent floor plan and condition. Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500. Jean Hopper, 756-9142._

109

Housbs For Sale

NEW LISTING. Lakewood Pines. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that features all formal areas. Den with fireplace, garage and over 1800 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756-6810; nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302

y

popular Lynndaie subdivision. Nice wooded lot with tall tines highlight this, lovely two story with over 2700

areas, garage and separate laundr room. Aldridge & Souther'

756 3500. Jean Hopper. 756-9142

COLONIAL HEIGHTS - 3 bedroom brick ranch, carpet, hardwood floors, fireplace, pool, deck, totally ))rivate. Reduced by owner. $59,400 Call 758 1355.

COUNTRY CHRISTMAS is always special. Situated on an acre lot, this warm, inviting home offers peace [ana quiet in its 3 bedrooms, large [country kitchen, garage and Atorage building. Come see It. Aldridge 8. Southerland. 756 3500. Jean Hopper, 756 9142.

COUNTRY LOG HOME On 35

[wooded acres. 20 minutes from [town All offers considered. Owner tinancino available Call after 5 [pm., 1 342 6141.

[ELMHURST - Roomy Dutch Col ,onial Offers 4 bedrooms, formal .areas, lovely family room, garage .with studio, workshop area Located on d quiei sireei and li s only $61,900. Call Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025 or -Richard Lane 752 8819

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

square fsst of heated area plus a double garage. Formal living and dining rooms, gorgeous kitchen, family room, four bedrooms, many, many extras Priced at $139,000. Located at 109 Jamestown Road.

CAN'T MENTION WHAT the owner will take but It's better than the asking pricq of $56.00o. What a deal with a 10's% fixed rate VA loan assumption. Balance approximately $45,000, payments approximately $490 PITI. Nice plan with great room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths, deck and storage. Located at 101 Lancaster Drive. $56,000. Make us an otter!

PRICE REDUCTION in Horseshoe Acres. Owner has cut the price $2,000 on this home in excellent condition at 119 Blacksmith Lane. Close to the hospital and medical complex this fine home features a large great room and dining area with fireplace, very well designed kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Large lot with storage build ing. Possible Federal Land Bank loan assumption. Reduced to SO.OC

NEW LISTING In the Grifton area. Located just outside Gritton In the country. Well built home features living and dining area, family room v.-ifh firSpiSCe. hri berlrooms two full baths,garage, big 19 acre lot Priced at $72,000.

Mavis Butts Realty 758-0655

NOTHING LIKE A SALT BOX to chase away the winter chills! Nestled on a tree-lined lot, this lovely home under construction features great room with fireplace, country kitchen with dining area and sliding doors to deck, 3 bedrooms (2 overlook kitch en/dining area from balcony) and 2 baths. A price sure to please at only $56,900.

FOR THE PRACTICAL HOME

Buyer this brick home could be for you! In established neighborhood featuring conventional loan assumption. Offering large great room with fireplace (has woodstove), kitchen with dining area, 3 bedj^ms, 2 baths, patio with privac* fencing and carport with storage. $56,900.

LOCATION, LOCATION,

Location,., near hospital, med school and Doctors Park. Immaculate like new home Is only 2 years old. Features dark stained hardwood foyer, great room with fireplace, large kitchen with dining area, laundry area, dining room. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and large outside storage shed. $57,900.

COZY, COMFORTABLE

Convenience...all describe this cute home. Features Include living room, dsn/dining room with sliding glass doors to deck, eat-ln kitchen, laundry area, 3 bedrooms, 1 '/i baths and carport. $47,900.

WORK OUT YOUR OWN

Decorative Ideas In this attractive starter home on Ragsdale Road. Offers living room with woodburn-ing stove, dining area, country kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, carport and lovely corner lot.

Elaine Troiano, Realtor    756-6346

Jane Butts, Broker    756 2851

Shirley Morrison, Broker 758-5463 Mavis Butts, Realtor,GRI.CRS    752    7073

MRS. CLAUS would love the kithen In this new wood siding ranch with over 1700 square feet. This home would sell for $65 $70,000 Greenville! But priced at only $54,900 In the Pines in Ayden. Open Sunday 2-4. Hignlte, Realtors, 757 1969 anytime.

PAYMENTS are based on your income! Almost new three and two bedroom ranches! Pay as little as $350 down. Call Hignlte Realtors anytime 757-1969.

iMrAT oBiri/ uc^erD    2

large bedrooms, spacious family room, kitchen and utility area. Good size lot, good school district. About 6 iles from Greenville. (Home would qualify to 10 3/4% or to 3/5% loan to qnaliflart hiiyarl $41,000. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TMNSPOHTATIONSPtaALS

CARS

1983 Oaltun 280-ZX - 5 speed, air condition, charcoal gray.

1983 Buick R*gal - 2 door hardtop, sandstone, fully equipped.

1983 Chevrolet Cavalier 2 door CS coupe, StpeeiJ, air condition, 9^500 miles.

1983 Mazda GLC Sport 2 door, 5 speed, air condition, 7,000 miles, burgundy.

1982 Ford Escort - 2 door, hatchback, 4 speed, white.

1QB9 Chevrolet Monte Carlo 2 door hardtop, bronze, automatic, air.

1982 Dodge 400 Convertible 2 door, 7,000 miles, fully equipped, white on white.

1982 AMC Jeep CJ-7 - Renegade. Black and red.

'Z    A,,    lacor,    options,    7.m    ntHes,    bur,onO,

1982 Dodge B-200 Maxlvan - Automatic, 318 engine, air conditioning, blue. Special.

1981 Pontiac T-1000 - 2 door coupe, 4 speed, air, brown metallic.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette - 2 door, 4 speed, air, beige^

1981 Dodge Omni - 4 door, 4 speed transmission, white.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette Automatic, air condition, nice. Burgundy.

1981 Olda98Regency2door,allcptions,28,000rniles,beige.

1981 Pontiac Trans AM - T-top, automatic, air condition, fully equipped, red.

1980 Mercury Cougar XR-7 - 2 door hardtop, burgundy, automatic, air.

i980ChrvalerCordoba Automatic,aircondition.tiltwheel,yellow,riice.

\Z FoSliluSlrd - Automatic, air condition, all f^

1980 Chevrolet Mallbu Claaalc - 2 door coupe, automatic, ai condition, M-80 package.

1980 Buick Electra Llmlled 4 door, fully equipped, charcoal gray.

1980 Ford Pinto - 2 door hatchback, automatic, air, sunroof.

1980 DodgeOmnI-2 door, automatic, black.

1980 Plymouth TC-3 - 2 door coupe, 4 speed, red and black.

1979 MGB Convartible - 4 speed transmission, orange.

1979 Buick Regal - 2 door hardtop, fully equipped, blue.

iflTfl Cidlllac Stvill# 4 door, fully eQuipped, brown.

1978 Chevrolet Caprice Claaalc 4 door sedan, automatic, air condition, blue.

1978 Dodge Diplomat 4 door, fully equipped, black.

1978 Toyota Celica - 5 speed, brown.

1978 Plymouth Arrow - 5 speed, air conditi()n.

iQ7ft Buick Skvlifk 4 door, automatic, dark QrG6n.

1978 Dodoe Aaoen 2 door, automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, air condition.

1978 ofdamoblle Omega - 4 door, automatic Uansmission, air condition, dark green.

1978 Dataun 510 - 2 door, 5 speed, air condition, dark green.

1977 AMC Gremlin - Automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, blue.

1077 Mercurv Monarch 2 door, automatic, air condition, silver

1977 Lincoln Continental Mark V - Cartier Designer Senes, all f^actory options, extra clean. 1976 Ford Granada - 4 door, automatic, air condition, 39,000 miles.

1976 Oldsmobile 98 Regency - 4 door, fully equipped, white.

1978 Ford Granada 2 door, automatic, airconditiOT, white.

1965 Oldsmobile 98 Luxury 4 door, fully equipped, low mileage, white

1981 Studebakar 4 door, 6 cylinder, standard shift, green.

TRUCKS

1983 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup-All factory options, red and white.

1982 AMC Jeep Laredo Pickup - Automatic, air, fully equipped, one owner, black.

1981 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup fully equipped, black.

1981 Ford Courier Pickup - 5 speed transmission, blue 1978 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Automatic, air condition, blue.

1978 Dodge 4 X 4 Power Wagon - Automatic, air condition, black.

1977 Dodge Van - 6 cylinder, automatic, green.

SKaALFUKCHASE 1983 CHKVSLEKEXECUTIUE (Alts

Chryskr Hm Vorker fifth kmm Chrysler Uftaroits PI||iiiMith iklbnts - 7 kk Omts Dod$r Arifs IDajons Ptymouth Horizon THrlMiM

Joe Cullipher , Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot

3401 S. Momorial Or.

Greenville. N.C.

7560186

iW ListlNG. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom,' 2>/> bath townhousa. Super nice. Lots of extras. Living room and dining room, and <b/er 14a0 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6aiO; nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.    _

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

COLLEGE COURT AREA. Located on a corner wooded lot at 1204 East Wright Road. Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area features a unique floor plan with lots of space. Recently remodeled with lots of nice features. Must see to appreci ate. $69.500.

CONVENIENT TO EVERYTHING. Large cornet lot at 1113 Ragsdaie Road In convenient College Court. 1760 square feet of heated area with formal living and dining area, kitchen, den with fireplace, three bedrooms,, two full baths, screened In back porch, carport. $64,500.

COUNTRY LIVING. Winterville area. Big 4 acre lot In a desirable area. Convenient to Mall and Greenville yet in the country. 2200 square feet of area with a different type floor plan. Large great room and dlnig area, throe bedrooms, loads of storage area, big rec or play room. $87,500.

BELVEDERE AT A great price Hard to find home In this desirable neighborhood st thid type price Located at 104 Belvedere Drive this cellent -home In -great condition offers 1445 square feet of heated area with large den-eating kltchen area with cozy fireplace, formal living room, three bedrooms, two full baths, carport, tencfd In yard. Call for an appointment.

OLD BRICK FIREPLACE in the

living room, three bedrooms, I'a baths, breakfast bar, deck, garage and priced for 10.35% financing Only $45,430. Call Hignlte, Realtors quick on this one, 757.1969 anytime.

ONLY A FEW miles from Greenville you will find this home overlooking the river on 3 acres of land. Great room, formal dining room, three bedrooms, 2 baths, large deck, plus garage. $150,000 Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.

MUST SEE to Appreciate this bedroom brick ranch close to town Woodstove In den heats home. Price reduced tor quick sale $53,500' Call Davis Realty tor details, 752 3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756-2904.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sale

PRICE REOUCEH - owner Is ready to sell and will consider financing at below market rate, immaculate 3 bedroom ranch with warm earth tone decor. $51,500. Call Jeff Aldridge at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 35CC. Nights 355 6700.

PUT YOUR CHRISTMAS tree up In this newly listed home In Winterville. It will look perfect In the large den by the fireplace. Glistening hardwood floors, 3 bedrooms, large cozy kitchen. Aldridge &

Southerland, '  ......

756-9142

756-3500. Jean Hopper,

PUT YOUR BOW on this farmers

home assumption. Pay small equity and assume the payments Only $41,500. Call Hignlte, Realtors. 757-1969 anytime.

RED OAK. Excellent loan assump tion keeps your payment low! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath, double garage, terrific kitchen with microwave, new cabinets. Nice! Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500. Jean Hopper, 756 9142.

109

Houses For Sale

UNBELIEVEABLE GOOD 9W%

loan assumption. Home looks like new! Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, fencecf in backyard. Convenient location. Call AAary at 756 1997, Oavis Realty, 752 3000, nights Lyle 756-2904.

10 3/4% or 10 3/5% loan to qualified buyer. Reduced owner transfer ring. Tastefully decorated in earth tones. Large lot, almost like new. 3 bedrooms, I'/j baths, good size kitchen and utility area. Well in sulated. $39,000. Call Davis Realty, 752-3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904

2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 7 baths, large landscaped lot. workshop-l6x36 plus sned and shelter. 1677 square feet of living area. Bill Williams Real Estate. 752 2615:

REDUCED. University area. Three bedrooms, formal areas, side and back glassed in porches. $55,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756-1322.

REDUCEOI University Area. Great location in a nice neighborhood area. This 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 1380 square feet brick ranch with eat-in kitchen and greatroom with fireplace, has extra insulation, new master bedroom carpet, new utility porch, and has been rewired. This is one deal not to pass up. Call Ross Rhudy. Aldridge & Southerland Realtors, 752-5149; 756-3500.

REINDEER COULD JUMP all

over the great room with cathedral celling and fireplace. Fixed rate financing is available on this 3 bedroom contemporary in the hard to find $50's, Hignlte, Realtors, 757-1969 anytime.

RUDOLPH WOULD love this 4 5 bedroom home In Lake Ellsworth. Located on a corner lot and only $81,900. Hignlte, Realtors 757 1969 anytime

DO YOU WANT to live in Lynndaie but need to sell your present home first? Then call about this home today because It may be possible to trade your present home. Formal rooms, den, playroom, three bedrooms, and three baths. $120,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.

SOUTHERN CHARM and comfort surrounds you In this stately Williamsburg home. This new custom built home features all formal areas with hardwood floors, family room with fireplace, approximately 2700 square feet, (juality worikmanshlp Ihroughout. Many extra*. The wooded setting In Greenvilles newest and finest area provides |ust the right atmosphere for this elegant home. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500; nights 756 5716.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

3 BEDROOM, 1'} bath home on large canal. Bulkhead and pier, centrat heat and air,, attic, double insulation, fully carpeted, living room with cathedral ceiling. Calf 1-946 9128 anytime.

109

Houses For Sale

3 BEDROOM BRICK Home For Sale. No Down payment if quality for FHA loan. Call 746 6555 anytime

THE EVANS COMPANY

AYDEN, FAWN ROAD Three bedrooms, 1 bath. Hardwood floors, some carpeted areas Located on cul-de-sac, fenced in yard. Living room with wood burning stove Kitchen/dinIng combination. 12 X 12 storage building. $44,000.

WHISPERING PINES. Simpson Beautiful lots with lots of trees 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Sunken den with French doors. Dining room 1254 square feet. $46,500

THREE BEDROOM, I'z bath home has assumable FHA 235 loan. Large corner lot located in SlTtgietree loaded with fruit trees is beautifully landscaped. Large deck. VA, FHA alternative financing. $48,500

GREAT LOCATION tor anyone working in hospital area. Singletree subdivision. 3 bedrooms. Heat pump. Deck. Elegantly decorated Assumable FHA 235 loan has mon thiy payments as low as $286.00 $47,500,

Call THE EVANS COMPANY at

752-2814

Faye Bowen Winnie Evans

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1983 Mazda Sport Truck - Spoker Wheels, white lettered tires, 11,000 miles, Beige and Brown Two-Tone.

1983 Regai Limited Demo - 3,800 miies, every option including sunroof. Dark blue with Sand Gray roof.

1983 Buick Electra Limited 2 door, 1300 miles. Brand new in every way. Charcoal with sand gray roof.

1983 Mazda Pickup - Very nice, new tires, low mileage, silver with blue trim.

1983 Chevrolet Customized Van - Raised roof, all the options. Sliver with dark blue velour interior.

1983 Mazda RX7 - Sparkling Black, 5 speed, air. Very Sharp!

1983 Buick Regal - dark brown, loaded with options. Executive Lease Car - New Car!

1983 Mazda Sundowner Pickup Low mileage, AM-FM stereo, chrome wheels, tool box, sliding rear window, bright red.

1982 Buick Regal Limited 4 door. This car is loaded with equipment! Clean as New! Brown with beige roof.

1982 Buick Regal Limited - Charcoal Firemist, Loaded, with equipment, new tires. Sharp!

1982 Chevrolet Malibu Classic - 4 door, dove gray, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise, power door locks, AM-FM stereo, low mileage, very, very clean.

1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme - 4 door, maroon with maroon cloth interior, low mileage, AM-FM stereo, sport wheels, very nice.

1982 Mazda RX7 GLS Package - Black, wire wheel covers, air, cruise, power windows, leather trim.

1982 Cutlass Cicra LS 4 door, dark blue with beige top. Clean Car!

1982 Datsun 280 ZX - Dark brown and Copper two tone, loaded with all equipment, including T-Tops!

1982 Chevrolet Custom Van - Like New In Every Way! Local van with every option. Beige.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix - Sharp Car! Low miles. New tires, local trade. Silver with maroom roof.

1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans Safari Wagon - Woodgrain paneling, cruise, wire wheels, maroon, 33,000 miles.

1981 Buick Park Avenue - 4 door, local trade, only 31,000 miles. Every option, Jadestone.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Dark blue with matching interior, cruise, rally wheels, stereo, local trade-in. 32,000 miles.

1981 Mazda 626 Luxury - 2 door, air, 5 speed, green metallic, 40,000 miles.

1981 Datsun Pickup - 13,000 miles, new in every way. Solid white. 1981 Buick LeSabre Limited Diesel - All the options, white with blue top. Very Nice Local Car!

1981 Buick Electra Park Avenue - White with Jadestone roof and interior. Loaded! New Tires! Very Sharp!

1981 Cutlass Supreme 2 door, dark blue, wire wheel covers, AM/FM stereo, Nice Car! 41,000 miles.

1980 Buick Regal 2 door, sunroof, bucket seats, loaded with options, 49,000 miles. Local car. Like New! Blue 1979 Cutlass Supreme 2 door. Sky blue with landau roof. Cruise

control, AM/FM stereo, Road Wheels. $4995.00.

1978 Ford Thunderbird - Diamond Jubilee Edition All Available Options, Steel Blue, 62,00 miles. Sharp!

GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

SPECIAL FINANCING As LowAs9V2%

AVAILABLE FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION HOMES. CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES

Call Joe Bowen

EastCarolina Builders, Inc. 752-7194 Anytime

in Investment Property

756 5258 752-4224

OWNER MUST SELLI Assume 9'i% loan plus equity (owner will possibly finance some equity). Payment $446.77 PITI. About 1.562 square feet, 2 heating systems, attic fan, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, cozy dsn with fireplace, kitchen with all extras, fenced in backyard, carport. $56.000. Call Davis Realty. 75! 3000. nights Mary 756-1997, Lyle 756-2904.

TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per

centage rate loan. Attractive 3 bedroom, 1'j bath brick ranch with carport. Located on woodsy lot near university. Living room/dining room, eat in kitchen, custom storm windows and doors, new furnace, (no air conditioning) Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square feet heated area. Take over approx imately $33,500 for 25 years re maining with principal and interest payment of $280.82 month. (This loan would cost you $388 month at todays rate of 13%). Pay equity of $16,400 or owner may consider some financing for part of equity. Very low closing cost and no discount points to buyer Lease'purchase also possible immediate possession Priced at $49,900 Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532 evenings No agents

111 Investment Property

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

Front/back brick duplex Double garage 2 washer dryer hookups. 2 stoves and 2 refrigerators, also convey. Possible partial owner fi nancing 417 419 East 3rd Street Call Winston Kobe, 756 9507, Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500

LOWER THAN RENT! New Duple apartment for sale. $38,000 Owner will pay points. Possiblity of 10.35'c interest before December 6 757 3998, 1 795 4323 or 1 792 4740

COUNTRY DREAM home com pletely remodeled. New Listing Exclusive with Davis Realty, (fall Lyle or AI Davis only, 752 3000 or 756 2904. Approximately 1,700 square feel situaled bn a large lot with full grown pecan frees Beautiful new vinyl siding, roof and shutters, tastefully decorated in earth tones. Spacious great room (old brick fireplace, ceiling tan) 3 bedrooms, 2 baths (wallpapered) Cheerful country kitchen with cabinets galore (gorgeous custom built) wall paper and dishwasher, utility room, storage, walk in closets, large front porch, super insulated. Call for details!

COUNTRY LIVING can be yours on I's acre lot with fruit trees Get away from it all! Over 1,8(X) square feet country home, 4 bedrooms, family room. $50's Call Davis Realty, 752 3(X)0, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904

113

Land For Sale

LAND FOR SALE: 55 acres near Stokes, State Road 1550. Cutover woodsland with good growth of young pines, road frontage, good development potential. Call 8251581 afterp m

103 ACRES near Simpson with 3: cleared Road frontage, rail Iron tage, no allotments $90,000 Contact Aldridge 8, Southerland ?56 3500, nights 756 5260    

OFFICE CONDOMINIUMS for

sale- Exciusive XUivis-Really Fan tastic opportunity to invest in your own business by owning your office Quality construction, optional sizes. Many amenities to compliment your profession Some pre sale prices available. Call Davis Realty, 2 3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904

WANTED

6 to 12 existing apirtment units Fully rented Call 9 to 5, 756 8811

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

103 ACRES with 33 cleared, 8 miles east of Greenville Over 2000 feet of road frontage Owner will divide $90,000 ..Aldridge 8, Southerland 756-j500; nights Don Southerland 756 5260

50 ACRE FARM south of Ayden in the St. John's Community Road frontage on SR 110 and SR 1753. 51 acres cleared. 7 acres wooded Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house Call_ tor full dtaTIs:    MselyTWrcus

Realty. 746 2166

115

Lots For Sale

WOODED LOT IN Country for sale approximately 1 acre, located on paved highway S.R 1751 (approxi mately 10 miles from Greenville near Venter's Crossroads) For ad ditional information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Olds Toronado

Dark Blue. Loaded. Moon roof. Looks New

1983 Chevrolet Camaro

White with brown cloth interior, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo. T-tops, 17,000 miles

1983 Subaru GL Wagon

Burgundy with light brown cloth interior. Loaded, like new ,3800 miles.

1983 Buick Regal

' 2 door, white with burgundy velour interior. Loaded, '

1983 Olds Cutlass Cruiser Wagon

Diesel, Beige with woodgrain, loaded with equipment. 11,000 miles.

1983 OldslCutlass Calais

2 door, loaded with equipment. White with brown landau top.

1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

Loaded. S#ver with-woodgrain gray-clot hiriTe-rior. 3.200 mitcc

1982 Datsun 280 ZX^

Silver, T-tops, 20.000 miles. Like New

1982 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

White with burgundy velour interior 3 seats, luggage rack.

1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera

4 door. Dark green with light green cloth interior

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon

Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic*air condition, AM'FM stereo.

1981 Ford Thunderbird

Red with white interior, one owner, loaded.

1981 Pontiac LeMans Wagon

White with woodgrain siding. Beige vmyl interior

1981 Olds 98 Regency

2 door. Beige with green velour interior, landau roof, loaded.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Light green with light green vinyl interior, bucket seats and console, loaded

1981 Toyota Corona

4 door, White with Light brown cloth interior, 21.000 miles, Loaded, Looks like New,

1980 Olds Cutlass LS

4 door. Light brown, light brown vinyl interior, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio, one owner,

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door. Automatic, air. brown with buckskin velour interior

1980 Buick Regal

2 door, light blue with landau roof, blue vinyl interior, bucket seats, automatic, air. AM/FM radio.

1979 Olds 98 Regency

4 door, Loaded, Light brown beige Vinyl roof. Light brown cloth interior, one owner,

1979 Ford Thunderbird

Blue with white landau roof, white vmyl interior. T-tops loaded, nice car

1979 Chevrolet K-5 Blazer

Loaded. One owner, white in color,

1978 Chevrolet Malibu

4 door, blue with blue cloth interior, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, 56.000 miles.

1978 Datsun Truck

Short bed. Red with black interior. AM/FM radio, sliding glass window, sport wheels, very nice,

1978 Olds Delta 88

4 door, Diesel, Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded

1978 Chevrolet Malibu

4 door, light blue with blue cloth interior. Automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio. 56.000 miles, one owner

1977 Honda Civic Wagon

Blue with black interior Nice car.

GM EXECUTIVE CARS SAVINGS UP TO S2000.00

1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham

4 door. White with light gray velour interior Loaded, 3.121 miles.

1983 Olds Omega

4 door. Maroon with maroon velour interior. Loaded. 3.785 miles.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

GM0UAU1Y SERVICE PARTS

MNHAL MOTOM CORNMATKM

i





0.12 The Daily Reflecto^, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1983    _Furniture Industry Shows Some New Grov^h

Bv BARBARA MAYER AP Newsfeatures

It takes a lot of capital to start a steel mill or to go into auto manufacturing. As a result, these industries are dominated bv well-established giants.

The furniture industry is not so automated or capital intensive, so it is still possible for a beginner with a good idea and a small amount of capital to gain a foothold.

These newcomers add vitality to the industry, bringing new ideas and enthusiasm when they enter the fray.

At the recent Southern Furniture .Market in North Carolina, for example, the owners of some newer small companies had interesting stories to tell.

Perry Nealis, president and founder of Cutter Furniture of Blue Mounds, Wis.. is an experimental psychologist by training. He was teaching the subject at the University of Wisconsin and making furniture as a hobby in the 1970s.

Nealis' friends liked the simple, clean-lined wood furniture he was building and asked him to make some pieces for them. It's an old story: Soon the demand justified opening a small shop in Blue .Mounds, a resort community, and he was enjoying a profitable and pleasant sideline.

After he'd opened a second store in Chicago, he realized t.here wasn't enough time to be a psychologist and a furniture businessman, too, Nealis took the plunge and left psychology to become a full-time furniture manufacturer.

The Cutter line, designed by Nealis, features inexpensive, functional modern furniture which often can be put together by the purc'ha^ ^ffd iTsed m^eveTitilifferent waysrlT^eems ^ to appeal to people all over the country. Today. Cutter has about 1,500 retail accounts, sales of over S2 million and emplovs 40.

Neaiis says he is glad he made the switch from academia to furniture. He carries more responsibility but finds furniture manufacturing more interesting, personally satisfying and lucrative than his former career.

Isaac and Renee Kubryk are also new furniture manufacturers. They own Grapevine Tables in Lodi. Calif.

The lives of many Lodi residents hinge on the Tokay grape, since Lodi is the center of Tokay grape growing in the United

States.    .    .    .    j

Most of Lo looks at the vint and sees grape juice and table grapes. The Kubryks. former furniture retailers in New York, looked at the gnarled old vines and saw furniture.

Thev went into the land-clearing business. Their company cuts the old vines, which must be removed when they stop producing, and takes them away in return for the wood, which is used tocreate one-of-a-kind table bases.

The vines are cleared during a three-week period in the fall just after harvest, so new vines can be planted. Kubryk and

PLAN YOUR HO

his workers gather enough vines then to produce furniture for tte entire year. The vines are fumigated, sandblasted clean, kiln-dried, then stored by size.

To make the table bases they sell, usually with glass tops, to some 2,500 retail accounts, various sizes of vines are combined and reinforced with steel rods.

Kubryk says once the old vines are gone in about 10 years, there wont be any more grapevine furniture because farmers are replacing the old type of vine with new strains which grow straight and would be uninteresting as furniture components.

However, he does not plan to close his business. He has begun using cypress and juniper wood to create unusual table bases.

Nealis and the Kubryks started something new but Alfred J, Audi has revived a furniture name from th^past. The name is Stickley and it may be better known today to art historians than to furniture buyers.

Gustav Stickley was the man who invented mission furniture at the turn of the century. He was an idealistic social thinker who espoused the values of the arts and crafts

movement for fine craftsmanship and the honest use of materials. But he was not a very good businessman Eventuallv his younger brothers took oyer his bankrupt furniture factory, according to Audi. The brothers replaced Stickleys unfashionable mission designs with traditional American cherry furniture. This very successfully for much of the first half of the 20th

century

Audi says he has a sentimental and financial attachnient to Stickley cherry. Not only does he still possess his childhood Stickley cherrv bedroom set but his family s retail furniture business in New York City has remained the largest retail outlet for Stickley furniture in the U.S.

When the Stickley factory in Fayetteville. N.Y.. was put up

for sale, Audi decided.ta buy it and to try to

business which was almost moribund. In 1976. he b^an overhauling the plant and training new employees. Today, there are 105 employees, sales of about $5 million and about 100 retail accounts.

Audi concentrates on producing solid cherry pieces, ana each piece is signed by the individuals who construct it.

ON THE^,

HOUSE

Planning Ahead Helps Yule Tree

Bow Window Creates Striking Living Room

By jerry Bishop

By EARL ARON.SON AP Newsfeatures

The Christmas tree is the local point of holiday decorations m the home. Proper planning helps to assure a .successful tree-buying venture.

First IS the choice of the room where the tree will be displayed and the place in the room. This will help you decide on the tree height and width. Don't select a spot near a fireplace, stove, radiator or other source of heat

Then decide on the type of evergreen tree you want, considering needle length, color and retention, branch and stem thickness.

Buy your tree earlv while selection is better. But keep it outdoors and in a bucket of water until you are ready to use it in the house A well-formed fresh tree will provide you with a sate, pleasant holiday.

Check the needles for niiohilifv If thev are brittfe-ur fall ott easilv. look tor another tree. Lift the tree and firmly hit the butt on the ground. If lots of needles drop, the tree probably is not fresh.

Before moving the tree into your house, trim an inch off the end of the butt. In the house, stand the tree in a container that will hold water - to be replenished, as needed. Water helps fireproof thedree. The tree may drink a quart a day.

Pines, firs and spruces are among the best Christmas trees. Check whether the branches are firm enough fa hold ornaments. A freshly cut tree is fragrant.

Cse fresh greens for decorations. At this time of year you ma\ prune jumpers, yews, pines and other landscape c\ergreens around your home. If you buy holiday greens early, cut ott a bit from stems and place the branches in water until ready for use. Normally, keep them outdoors in the .'hade, but in freezing weather store them in a cool room or garage. Spruce and pine will keep better than holly and jumper

The popularity of split foyer designs continues to grow. One reason is that they not only maintain their resale value, but usually the value appreciates considerably. the Bakersfield has a very attractive facade, including a large bow window in the living room and two square bay windows in the front bedrooms. The large living-dining room area offers bountiful furniture arrangement possibilities. The family will spend many happy hours in the spacious recreation room, of the Bakersfield, as well as plenty of space tor parties.

The handyman in the hrxise has a separate room at the back of the garage for his shop, or the family can use it to store overflow pos-

OfCi p

Li Ei r iitTT"

^ JilOWOU A ii.rp^    ...

sessions.

Area

Upper Level Lswcr Lc'.nl Garage & Shop

Sq. Ft.

1,461

710

651

Mo OllA

The Bakersfield

By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures

When you purchase what some real estate brokers call an "existing" house or what is referred to as a resale," you should get something more than the structure and the land that goes with it.

You should get the knowledge that the family has accumulated during the years it has lived there. This nformaiion includes facts and opinions which may not seem important at the time of the sale, but which balloon in value when the data is required at a later time.

This know-how can be obtained during the interval between the time the contract is signed and the date of the closing. Its usually while you, the buyer, are waiting for your mortgage loan to be approved. It is

avauauic 115111 11 uni inv aiui v

of the initial meeting, but its more readily forthcoming when the seller is in a good mood because he has made a sale and can proceed with his own plans for moving.

One way to get what you need is to write down the questions you want answered and have the seller write down the answers. Another is to make a list of the queries, ask the questions personally and write down the answers on the spot. Sometimes the facts and opinions are never again as easily available, neither before the deal is closed nor after you have moved in.

You will want to know the names, addresses and phone numbers of a good doctor, the nearest hospital and emergency ambulance service. Which plumber will come quickly when you need him and is he any good? How about a carpenter? If the house has a cesspool or septic tank, which company has been used when there is

venience. since differences of opinion often exist about competence and quality.

Naturally, there are many things you should find out before you sign a contract or even attach your name to what is called a "binder. You must know what your needs are and whether your new neighborhood will meet them. A community is made of many things, including the

gcfiviai

lIVUOMO,

trouble?

the average price of them, the locations of the schools and churches, the shopping conveniences and the character of the area.

This latter fact can be determined by what you already have heard - that is. the reputation of the neighborhood - and what you can find out from people who live there. Nothing is of more value in this respect

Will you get along with them? At this point, you should talk to the local minister, priest or rabbi. Attend some community function. Go shopping. Ask questions. Visit the neighborhood several times. You soon will find out whether you will get along with the people. You will see whether, if you have children, there are some of your youngsters" ages.

You will be lucky, indeed, if you find everything is ideal. It rarely is. Somewhere along the line you will have to make a compromise or two. But by making these pre-purchase tests, you will know whether you should give a little here and there iir order to get the benefit of the neighborhood's advantages.

buyer will think of many of these questions after his family has moved in. If you get ihe answers ahead 01 lime, you often can check them with neighbors at your con-

and relatives who live there.

Suppose you have plenty of factual data but lack the kind ot informaiion which will teii you something about the people who live in the area.

(Do-it-yourselfers will find much helpful data in Andy Lang's handbook, "PracticaL Home Repairs." which can IX uuldiiicu by Seiiuiiig $1.50 to this newspaper at Box 5, Teaneck.NJ 07666.)

TO ORDER THE BAKERSFIELD

Pkase send me the setls) checked below:

Z 5 sets (Minimum Const. Pkg.) S70

1 set (Study Pkg.) ....^...... ...$3S

Additional sets..............  $15    ewh

Materials List And Energy Saving Specification Guide Included ORDERS SENT U.P.S. OR PRIORITY MAIL

AMOINT ENCLOSED I saw this house in Ihe

Niiw of Nti|i*ptr

Name

Address

City & Sute

Make check or monev order payabk to and send to: UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE (DEPT. 6-A)    -

200 Park Avenue, New Vbrk, N.Y. 10166    ^

lere's the Answer

By A\1)VL\\(.

AP Ncvtsfcaiures

- Every lime we paint our house it seems blistering and peeling wcurs on one ot the outside walls about a year later \> this because the particular wall is on the same side as the kitchen and one ot the bathrooms'? A neighbor tells me this is .'0 tiut I want to be sure before 1 lake steps to correct the condition, as he did successtully,

A - It IS likely your neighbor has pinpointed the problem. Moisture in the kitchen and bathroom, unable to escape, apparently is going through the interior wall surlaces and getting under the paint on the outside wall. This causes the blistering and peeling, .As you will tind out from your neighbor, you must find a way tor the moisture to escape from your house other than through the walls. You probably will find he used exhaust fans or wall vents or both. Even opening the windows a bit a couple ot times a day tor about 15 minutes will help They need not be opened more than a couple ot inches.

Garden

Clinic

Q - There is a crawl space under our house. The floors over It are always a little chilly: not a lot, but enough to be uncomfortable on very cold days What is the best solution for this problem'

A - The joists under the floor should be tilled with baits ot insulation .After that is done, cover the joists with a heavy felt. It there is a dampness problem as well as one of temperature, cover the crawl space soil with sheets of polyethylene. lapping the joints and holding them in place with sand. Be sure the sand is very drv.

Q. - I soon will be putting down a floor made of random-width boards screwed to a subtloor I want the floor to look like the oldtime pegged type. Is this possible, and how do I do It

A - Buy some wooden dowels Use a drill bit of the same size to make holes about half an inch deep in the floor boards wherever the screws are to be placed. .Next, drill smaller holes in the center of the plug holes. After the screws have been driven home, plugs cut from the dowels are glued into place over the screws and sanded smooth.

Q - I have done a number of plumbing jobs over the years in the three houses we have owned, but 1 have one coming up soon with copper tubing, which I have never used 1 have been told one of the big advantages of the copper tubing is it can be bent. Is there some special way of doing this to avoid kinking if

A. - One way is to use special bending tools available at plumbing supply houses an(J well-stocked home centers and hardware specialty stores In the absence of those, copper tubing can be bent V placing it on a board, fastening one end, then kneeling on it and raising the free end very ^jowiy and carefully. A certain amount of muscle is required

Q. What is a good way to protect azaleas from winter cold injury*? ( R. U .. Morganton)

A. Mulch provides an ideal insulation for azaleas. Four to six inches of most organic materials will aid in winter protection. Before adding this layer of mulch, fertilize with a 0-20-2 fertilizer. The phosphorous encourages root growth and the potash helps in lowering the freezing point of plant tissue. Use a 0-20-20 at the rate of one pound per 100 square feet of plant bed area. Broadcast evenly around the plants and try not to concentrate the fertilizer in a ring or in handfuls under the foliage, as this could result in root damage. Water thoroughly after this treatment. This will especially help azaleas and lessen the amount of leaf drop. Do not apply quickly-available nitrogen in fall or late summer because it encourages tender vegetative growth. Remember to water shrubs during dry periods when water is frozen in the ground because plants still take up water in the winter. Most shrubs killed in winter die from lack of water rather than cold temperatures.

Q. What are some plants that will attract bluebirds? (Y.D.. Charlotte)

A. Although the bluebirds diet consists mainly of insects, they do eat berries and

iruit. You can improve your garden and yard as a bluebird habitat by planting some of these trees and shrubs: wax myrtle, blackberry. blueberry, elderberry, hackberry, mulberry, sarvisberry (serviceberry or shadbush), viburnum, cedar, cherry, flowering dogwood, holly, lespedeza, multiflora rose. oak. pines and sumac. Other songbirds will also benefit from these plantings.

Q. Will it hurt to prune my muscadine grapes now to make a wreath for Christmas? (F.L., Asheboro)

A. Generally, muscadine grapes are hardy enough not to be affected by early winter pruning, especially since you will not be taking away that much of the plant. It is important however, to wait until all the leaves drop before doing any pruning. It is questionable whether early pruning will damage bunch grapes since they are more susceptible to winter cold injury. If you want a wreath made from bunch grapevines, cut branches from a vine that is particularly vigorous or find a wild fox grape in the woods and cut the material you need from it. Better still, make your wreath or wreaths in February when bunch grapes should be pruned and save the wreaths for next Christmas.

Supplied by the N.C^ Agricultural Extension Service.

r





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g.2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11,1963

Q

Afjiica Experiences Worst Drought In Decade

^    JAMES    F.    SMITH

Associated Press Writer

MOLIMU NTHUSE, Lesotho lAP) - The woman strapped her baby to her back and balanced a cardboard box on her

head. The box contained oats, dried milk and vegetable oil. Turnished by the People of the Lnited States of America."

! "Without this we would just die." the woman said through a

Sotho interpreter as she prepared for the day-long trek back to her mountain village, "We have nothing We don't even try

' now to plant anything. It 's no use

She IS one of millions of people going hungry across . southern and western Africa where drought has brought the

continent 's worst food crisis in a decade

The Amencan'tood packets, given out by a monthly clinic for mothers with young^children, would last about two-weeks, the woman said.

After that, she added, she would help build roads in Lesotho's own "Food For Work" program in return for two packets of corn meal and six cans of fish donated by other countries When the corn meal and fish are gone, it will be time again to return for another monthly ration at the I S-sponsored clinic,

.According to the I nited Nations Food and .Agriculture Organization FAO in Rome a "significant proportion " of l.)0 million people in 22 Atrican countries are facing catastrophic" to<xi shortages alter two years ot drought.

. In parts ol southern and western Africa, human suffering is said to be at its worst since the 1972-74 lamine in the Sahel region befowthr Sahara-Desert r severaf hundred- thousa nd people died then The F.AO IS seeking an extra 7oii.ihhi tons of emergency food donations and S7H million in other aid The United States doubled its emergency pledge in November to S.50 million alter the F.AO said pledges amounted to only 25 percent of the needs

Statistics in Lesotho suggest a grim situation: production of maize corn-, sorghum and other cereals down from an annual average ot 2(Ki,oih) tons to ,5:1.iHKr tons - a loss ot S:54 million, and as many as .58,ikhi livestock deaths - a loss ot SlU million Total direct losses in agriculture are about :iO percent ot the gross domestic product More than halt ot Le.sotho's 12 million people are considergjl in need of emergency tood aidd>ecause ot drought. The ('untry fs-seeking 22-.ow ums ot tood supplies from overseas donors to survive until the next harvest in .April and .May The country attributed Kki deaths to the drought in a report six months ago.

In the past tew.weeks, substanial rams have tallen in large areas ot Lesotho and .South .Arica-tOF l.he first m three years or more But it remains uncertain whether the rains mean a break m the drought Even so. people will have to survive on outside aid until the normal harvest time in April and .May.

Elsewhere in the area:

-South Africa, the breadbasket of the southern region that includes Lesotho, produced about 4 million tons of maize this year, less than half the normal output, forcing the country to import for the first time in years. Malnutrition in black homelands is reported sharply higher.

-In Zimbabwe, the government says half a million head of cattle will die from lack of grazing and water, a similar figure to that predicted in neighboring Botswana. Zimbabwe is in danger of becoming a net food importer for the first time, and an estimated 430,000 families will not be able to grow enough to feed themselves. The maize crop is down from the bumper- output of 3 million tons in 1980 to 600.000 tons.    4'

"The position in the iAfrican) communal lands is catastrophic." said Eddie Cross, head of Zimbabwe's meat slaughtering commission. "I don't think that's too harsh a word."

-Mozambique and Angola, both former Portuguese colonies, are contending with guerrilla movements that have compounded the drought problems. Food shipments to the needy often are delayed or unable to get through dangerous areas, increasing the hardships of the rural areas.

The official Mozambican news agency AIM said recently that "reliable reports suggest dozens have died per day in recent weeks" in southern areas of the country. Although recent rains have raised spirits in the country, the government estimates the country would need 250.000 tons of gra-inbeforetheharvestinApril --In Zambia, hungry peasants have resorted ^o eating grass and roots. The Times of Zambia reported recently that seven people died after eating poisonous roots.

-In West Africa, unusually dry winds have tanned bush fires in tropical coastal countries. Ghana and the Ivory Coast say the lack of rainfall and the resulting vulnerability to fires have cut production of coffee, their principal export.

Rinderpest, a crippling cattle disease, has afflicted drought-weakened herds in several countries. Cassava crops have suffered from sharp increases in destructive insects.

-The semi-arid Sahelian countries of Chad, Niger. .Mali. Upper Volta. Senegal. Gambia and .Mauritania are ravaged by the sparse rinfall. The cereal deficit in the Sahel region this year is estimated at I million tons Officials say. however, that the droi^t is less severe lhan that of the early 1970s, and that few deaths have been reported so tar.

Lake Chad is at its lowest level in more than 1.5o years. Mostafa Tolba. director of the U N. Environment Program, told the General Assembly in New York in October. "As a result ot this drought, lake and river water has been severely depleted, animal and plant life destroyed"

Drought has brought civil unrest and other problems to :i4 countries. Tolba said, adding: "Projected famine is likely io

be the worst ever in these countri. with millions of people affected."

Diplomats and aid workers say the difficulties are compounded in some countries by inefficiency and corruption in the distribution of emergency aid.

They say Lesotho is relatively free of these problems, encouraging donor agencies to help. The government, however, frowns on no-strings handouts, as is the U.S. custom here, on the grounds the villagers will become dependent on

PEANUTS

aid. Lesothan officials prefer that the donees clear fields or build roads in return for food.

At the Mophatos .Mantsase -Mission near Mafiteng in Lesotho, the Rev. Patrick Maekane said the drought-related diseases of kwashiorkor i protein-deficiencyi. gastro-enteritis and tuberculosis have risen among the 400 children who attend the mission's monthly clinic.

His assistant. Adelaide Nkeli. said. "Dozens of children have kwashiorkor. Half of them are hopeless cases '

')eQr Contributor, , we lote it.

BLONDIE

rVE GOT A ^ MAD CRAVING T-UW APPLES AND < PEANUT BUTTER

yV --'

AND WE DON'T MAvE ANY PEANUT BUTTER

WHY DON'T VOU GO ' BACk TO SLEEP AND GET A MAO 7- CRAVING FOR ' SOMETHING WE'VE

BEETLE BAILEY

WORIIi IIIL W \II Klaine Poley. left, and Terry (larr light up (liban cigars at an anclioii in New York. Some 2(i(MMHl Hor (le faracli cigars, made in 19.5s in Havana belore Fidel (astros rise to power, were auctioned. Bidding was in the

range of Sllllll a box. Belore selling the cigars, the auction house had to convince U.S. (ustoms that the cigars were exempt from an embargo imposed on (uban cigars in 1%;!. (AP l.aserphoto)    i

Past Preserved In Photos

PHANTOM

By,IF\NMcWIK Associated Press Writer

Norfolk, Va AP- - in the 19.50s. commercial photographer O, Winston Link spent his spare time and money taking pictures ot Norfolk & Western steam trains simply to capture them belore they disappeared into history.

Now. more than 2o years alter he linished the six-year project, his photographs are receiving widespread public recognition and critical acclaim

'T've liked trains ever since 1 was a little kid.' said the Brooklyn-born Link. 68. as he toured a Chrysler .Museum exhibit here ot .57 ot his 2.200 tram pictures. "There's lots of action, smoke, nice sounds, nice smells. They're going someplace in the country .'

His photographs portray not only the steam trains m their tinal years before they were replaced by diesel engines, but the people who lived and worked with the railroad.

The pictures, most of them taken at night, show trains as a surreal backdrop to rural lite along the NiW railroad tracks in Virginia. West Virginia. North Carolina and .Mary land,

Three people chat on a porch while a train roars by in the background: teen-agers in bathing suits lounge by a swimming pool at night while a train passes behind them: young lovers watch a drive-in movie as a tram chugs along bey ond the screen.

In another scene, a tired-looking woman sprawls m an easy chair in her living room while a young boy excitedly waves to the train passing just outside a picture window The Lithia. Va . lamily that owned the house used to invite Link for fried chicken dinners during his frequent trips to take pictures of the trains.

His project began in 19.55 when Link, a tree-lancer who shot pictures lor annual reports and other company publications, went to Staunton on an assignment for Westinghouse.

(Jne night he wandered over to Waynesboro and. using synchronized flashes, took a picture of a locomotive pulling into the station

He sent a print to N&W and asked their permission to do a self-financed project ol tram photographs, taken primarily at night

"It was a part ot America - lile along the railroad - that no one had ever seen or noticed." he said ".Mainly because no one would ever be out at that time ol night. "

N&W officials liked the idea "They gave me 4.50 engines. 2.500 miles of track and several thousand employees and word from the president to do whatever I asked." Link said.

Link was given his own key to the railway telephone boxes so he could call dispatchers and lind out what time a train would arrive. Drivers would slow down the tram or make the 'engine belch white smoke at just the right moment.

One of those who helped Link was Hobart Scott, who retired as supervisor of transportation tor N&W in 19()9.

"I just didn't know how much longer steam was going to be with us." said Scott, who lives in Roanoke, "I'm just so glad someone was interested in getting this material together,"

Link, who spent up to six days arranging lights for a single night picture, knew he was'working on dea^ine.

By the time he finished his project in l%o. steam trains were rapidly being replaced by diesels, which Link respects but doesn't find quite as exciting.

Link, working with one or two assistants, used up to three 4x5 Graphic view cameras on tripods and as many as 60 flash bulbs per shot.

Along with his pictures of the dying steam trains. Link recorded their sounds on six albums, including one haunting recording of train noises interspersed with chiming Christmas carols.

N&W used some of Link's photographs in a booklet and a few others showed up in railroad magazines over the years.

Only recently have critics begun to praise Link's work. The New York Times described his photographs as having a "compelling and thoroughly delightful aura of strangeness," A London Sunday Times Magazine critic said Link "is poised to become the object ot an international cull."

The Museum of Modern Art in New York owns some of his prints, and he has had one-m.an shows in London and New York.

Link, who lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., clearly enjoys the belated recognition, but most of his attention now is focused on restoring an old steam engine and railroad car he saved from the scrap heap.

His idea is to gel them rebuilt and running on abandoned tracks in New Jersey as a tourist attraction,

Next, he said with an enthusiastic smile. "I might get a caboose."

Window Glass Loses Strength

POiNCeR,. THROW OUT THie RIFFRAFF/

HEY,,VOU PROAIieeP ME TWO BEERe IF I INTRODUCED YOU<'^y UH,,

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

I CAN'T BaieVE IT.' IVB ^y\lLQ B6EM PICKED ID , BE A CHRISrmASTREE /

AT LAST r/Vi GOING TO BE ABLE TO BE A WRT OF CHRI6T/V1A5 [

AUWOUGM I (NAG kind OF MOPING FDR A ONE-HORSE OPEN sleigh

SHOE

WINDOW SAFETY

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -Glass windows installed in office buildings and sky scrapers lose 40 percent of their strength in 10 years, according to a disaster research study by Texas Tech University.

The chief culprit in sapping

the strength of the glass is the weather. Although the study suggests revising some existing building codes, it adds that glass manufacturers have considered strength loss over the life of a building, so safety factors already are built into the construction process.





Business Notes

PLANTERS PROMOTION

Thomas H, Swanson has been promoted to assistant cashier by Piantm National Bank in Greenville, according to J, Richard Futrell Jr.. executive vice president, and Ray J. Boleman Jrsenior vice president and city executive Swanson who joined PNB in 1981 as a management trainee. traiKierred to Greenville in 1982 and was named manager of the Carolina East Mall office.

0^ the University of .North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a bachelor's degree in business administration.

RECEIVED CRB

Connally Branch, president of Realty World/Clark-Branch Inc., Realtors, has been awarded the Certified Real Estate Brokerage Manager designation by the Realtors National Marketing Institute, an affiliate of the National Association of Realtors.

The award was announced during the marketing institute meetings held in Las Vegas, Nev. in conjunction with the national convention of the NAR.

Branch is a member of the Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors and the North Carolina Association of Realtors.

EXPANSION NOTED Preferred Marketing Concepts Inc., a Greenville-based marketing corp., announced its continued expansion in the Washington area with the appointment of C.W. Cappy" Sermons. I'he firm said Sermons will be responsible for marketing company services in Washington and the surrounding communities.

M. Patrick Paul, president, said Harland T. MacKendnck joined the company several months ago and will continue in a sales capacity in the Washington area.

NEW SUPERVISOR

Donald F. DeLong, vice president of production at Texasgulfs Aurora ph(phate operations, announced that Frank Carson has joined the accounting department as accounting supervisor.

Carson, a graduate of East Carolina University, joins Texasgulf from Carter-Weber Co. in Sanford. The company said Carson and his wife, Debra, and their son, Scott, will relocate to the Greenville area in the near future.

Fed Says Southast Economy Will Outgrow Natiorrln 1984

ATLANTA lAP) - The economy of the Southeast is expected to grow faster than the national average in 1984. mostly because of an expected booist in manufacturing, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta reported.

The latest issue of the bank's newsletter. "Southeastern Economic Insight." said continuing migration of people into the Southeast will boost spending on housing and durable consumer goods next year and will augment empioymeni in the service industries of Florida and Georgia.

That is expected to spur production of consumer goods in the region. In addi

tion. there should be an increase in output by national defense industries. the Fed said.

Unemployment in the region was almost 11 percent in January but had declined to 9 percent at the start of the fourth quarter. In Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, joblessness still is close to 12 percent. But in Florida and Georgia, it has fallen to about 8 percent.

The heavy mix of service-related industries in these two states helped buffer them from the massive unemployment problems that characterized the manufacturing-dominated , economies of neighboring states," the newsletter said.

The economists said the recession hit bottom a year ago and the 1983 recovery has been faster than expected.

With the region's economy mustering fresh strength as 1983 ends, plants should continue reopening and the job outlook should continue to improve as long as consumer and business spending continues to fuel the national recovery. the newsletter said.

The Fed said the reopening of those plants will benefit industrial states in particular, including Tennessee. Alabama, the Carolinas and Mississippi.

"If the national economy sustains its strong first-year

advance in the second year of recovery, these states could show sharp employment again in 1984." it said. That would mean that virtually all states in the region would grow at a healthy pace over the year"

The Atlanta Fed economists said exports should revive steadily in 1984 if the value of the dollaf in foreign exchange markets drops in response to the increasing U.S. trade deficit.

The panel expects farm conditions to improve next year with the resumption of full-scale planting, although this year's drought increased financial pressure on already debt-ridden farmers.

Fears Over Interest Rates^ ^ Dampen Wall Street's Spirits

ByCIIETdKKIER VP BiKiness Wrjler

NEW YORK (API - Fears of rising interest rates are putting a damper on Wall Street's holiday spirit as the end of tjievear approaches.

^: By almost any measure, economic growth is proceeding at ; a strong pace, and the benefits of the recovery are showing up

more ana more in employment statistics.

I ~ The Labor Department reported the civilian unemployment

* Cate at 8.4 percent in November, down almost a full "percentage point from just two months earlier. Last

; December, the jobless rate stood at 10.8 percent The number of people holding jobs in this, country grew by ^^ire than 700,000 last month - a figure Greg Smith, research

director at Prudential-Bache Securities, called "stunning.

*' But manv Federal Reserve-watchers see a dark side to all 7 this good tiews. They say it is increasing the likelihood that : ^e Federal Reserve wil'l pursue a restrictive credit policy,

' exerting upward pressure on interest rates.

: "The most recent batch of economic data can only suggest

- to the Fed that the economy is doing just fine with current interest rates, and may even be a little too strong. Smith

* said in his latest commentary on the market outlook.

: "Thus far. the first phase of the recovery has been ideal

- from the viewpoint of government policymakers, observes

- Paul Boltz, financial economist at the investment manage-: ment firm of T. Rowe Price Associates. But now. he says, the : question of the hour has become "Is the upturn too much of a

' -*^o^achieve a desirable slowing in the economy, the Fed < evidently thinks that a touch ot^ monetary restraint is ' necessafv now." Boltz says.

: Evans Economics, a Washington-based torecastmg firm, : recently projected a rise of to " of a percentage point in

both short-and long-term interest rates over the next six

months

Amid such forecasts, rates rose in the credit markets for most of the past week, and stock prices fell. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 5.18 to 1.260.06. .

The New York Stock Exchange composite index lost 27 to 95.70, and the American Stock Exchange market value index was down 2.79 at 222.14.

Big Board volume averaged 95.70 million shares a- day. against 100.21 million the week before.

If a significant rise in interest rates does occur, it could be expected to act as a brake on economic growth.

Policies aimed at slowing the pace of economic expansion are hardly the standard script for an election year. In theory, politicians in power want the economy to be booming at election time so that the voters will be in a mood to keep them in office.

But Evans Economics analysts argue that anyone who expects all-out stimulus now is misreading the situation and misjudging the thinking of the Fed's chairman. Paul Volcker. in his campaign against inflation.

"The man would rather fight a small increase in inflation now than a big increase later on, and as a result will tighten no matter what is on the election docket," they maintain.

To date, interest rates much higher than the rate of inflation haven't kept the economic recovery from proceeding at a strong pace. But some analysts think the Fed is now ready to tighten the credit screws as far as if takes to slow it down.

Once that happens, there would presumably be a better chance for interest rates to fall. But at the same time corporate profits and other economic data would look a lot less robust than they do now - a prospect that apparently is already bedeviling the stock market.

Dollar Wraps Up Best Week iAgainst Foreign Currencies

CT&T WORKERS (ITEI)

Rose Hathaway, service representative in Carolina Telephone's commercial and marketing department here, and Sammy K. Searcy, installer-repairer in the installation and repair department, were recognized recently for having completed 15 and 10years service, respectively.

Mrs. Hathaway, a Pitt County native, resides at Lake Ellsworth with her husband. W'.H., and their twochildren.

Searcy, a native of Rocky Mount, now resides in Greenville.

The company said Danny Bullock, a cable splicer here, recently atteniied a seminar on fibre optic training at Bell Laboratories in Atlanta. Ga.

QUARTERLY DIVIDEND

Directors of Fieldcrest Mills Inc. voted on Dec. 1 to^pay a regular quarterly dividend of 50 cents per share on De 30 to holders of record Dec. 16.

NAMED PRESIDEN':^

Calvin Lyndell Parker of Greenville has been named president of Grey and Gill Corp. of Raleigh, a new franchising company wifh most of its assets in Domino's Pizza Inc.

Parker, who will reside in Grey and Gill's new \meland. N.J.. headquarters, is a 1978 graduate of J.H. Rose High School. Son of Mrs. Naomi B. Parker of Greenville, he has also attended Winston-Salem State University for three years.

BB&TAD\AN(EMENTS

Branch Banking & Trust Co. of Wilson announced that East Carolina University graduates W. Kendall Chalk and Kelly S. King have been promoted to executive vice presidents.

Chalk, who joined the bank in 1975. earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in business administration at ECU. A Raleigh native, he was recently named manager of loan administration. He resides in Wilson.

King, who is headquartered in Charlotte, is manager of the metropolitan region. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees from ECU. graduating magna cum laude, and joined BB&T in 1972,

^ FARM BUREAU AWARD

John Sledge, president of the North Carolina Farm Bureau Federation, announced at the NCFBF's annual in Asheville that James N. Galloway, Pitt Farm Bureau president, was the recipient of a special award.

Sledge said the award, presented in recognition of outstanding production during a statewide contest, provides Farm Bureau agents an opportunity to win an honor for their county's president who serves on a voluntary basis.

On hand for the aware! from the local bureau were Galloway and agents Terry Wood. Ken Barnes and Tommy Kirkland.

AWARDED A( ( REDITATION

Kenneth R. Hutcherson, an account executive in E.F. Hutton's Greenville office, has been accredited by the firm as a financial management advisor as a result of his successful completion of Hutton's advanced financial planning program.

The designation is awarded to Hutton account executives who complete training in the areas of income and retirement planning, financial planning for small business owners, and employee benefit planning.

Hutcherson, who the officers tax shelter coordinator, joined Hutton 1981. He earned a bachelor" degree in business from the University of .Miami and a master's degree in education from East Carolina Universitv

SALES POSITION

Ayden native Joan Abernathy was promoted to sales representative for Union Camp Corp. of Franklin. Va.. according to the national forest products company which specializes is paper products at the Franklin mill.

The firm said Ms. Abernathy is one of 13 sales representatives for the division selling printing and writing grades of paper. Her sales territory will involve North Carolina. South Carolina and western Virginia.

The daughter of Martha Abernathy of Ayden. she is a graduate of Parrott Academy. Kinston, and the University ol Richmond.

DIRECT MAIL FIRM

Bill Ipock announced the opening of Store To-Door Inc.. a direct mail company headquartered in Greenville.

Ipock said the company has more than 15 million resident addresses in-house and is capable of mailing to any resident neighborhood in the United States. He said Store-To-Door specializes in both individual and consolidated mailings.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS DEMOtlTION OF OLD COUNTY HOME BUILDING

COUNTY OF PITT, GREENVILLE, N.C.

Sealed proposals will be received by the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, Greenville, North Carolina, in the Commissioners regular meeting room on the second floor of the Pitt County Office Building, 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 11:00 a.m., E.S.T., on the 19 day of December, 1983 and immediately thereafter publicly read for the furnishing of all labor and necessary equipment to completely demolish the existing masonry structure at the (M County Home site and remove all demolition materials from the site; also, for filling existing basement with suitable fill materials in accon dance with the, specifications as setforth in their proposal.

Complete plans, specifications, and contract documents will be open in the office of C.A. Holliday, P.E., County Engineer, and may. be obtained by those qualified and proposing to submit a bid.

:    By.STEVENP.ROSENFELD

^ AP Business Writer

WEW YORK (AP) - The dollar went ihrough the roof this past week, continuing a bittersweet success record that has hwped contain inflation and cope with huge deficits at home while making it Ililticult for Americans to compete for ^lisiness abroad.

; jn finishing its best week ever in the 16 years the Federal Reserve Board has pen keeping such figures, the dollar rose ( record heights against the currencies et Britain. France, Italy. Spain. Norway Jnd Denmark and reached lo-year highs jjainst the    West    German    mark    and

Pjitch guilder,

i Traders and government officials say iemand for dollars    is being    spurred bv

Jectations    that    interest    rates    will

Tamain high    in the months    ahead    and

Jltot inflation will continue to moderate,

!"Money managers are always looking id see where they can earn the highest icturn on their capital." said David ;&nst, an international economist at ^ans Economics Inc. in Washington, He i|id dollar-denominated investments iiive been heading the list.

I'For example, three-month dollar-Slenominated deposits in Europe were Jpeying about 10 percent interest this past ^Nueek, compared with about 4.5 percent Job deposits denominated in Swiss francs '5nid 6.5 percent on deposits of West rman marks.

Analysts also say that increased in Lebanon has spurred a flight

of funds into the dollar - a traditional haven in times of unrest.

"Unfortunately, when trouble breaks out anywhere in the world, there is some movement of funds into the United States." said Beryl Sprinkel. undersecretary of the treasury for monetary affairs.

David Kemper, chief economist at Kemper Financial Services Inc. in Chicago, estimates that flight of capital has come to $l(K) billion or more over the past two vears. The flow of funds into the United States over the past 12 months has been greater than at any time since the year before the outbreak of World War II, he said.

"This vear. capital inflows have helped to fuel a stronger than expected recovery in those sectors which do not produce internationally tradable goods: housing, services, high technology capital goods and the federal government. said Hale. "In fact, it can be argued that capital inflows and a strong currency have made it possible for the United States to finance its defense buildup without having to make any sacrifices in domestic living standards."

By keeping down the price of imported goods, something that holds down price increases by U.S. manufacturers and encourages U.S. industry to seek greater efficiency, a strong dollar helps reduce the inflation rate while boosting productivity.

For each 10 percent rise in the value of the dollar, the inflation rate falls by about one percentage point, Ernst said.

The dollar is now more than 50 percent higher than it was at the start of 1980 and it has risen more than 12 percent so far this year. Meanwhile, inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index, has fallen from 13.3 percent in 1979 to 3.9 percent a year ago. a rate it has been holding so far this year.

But businessmen who make goods that compete with imports and businessmen who sell U.S. good abroad have suffered.

"U.S. exports have been a heavy casualty. Our export volume is down by over 25 percent from two years ago," Anthony Solomon, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said this past week.

The nation's foreign trade deficit, which reached a record $42,7 billion last year, stood at $55.6 billion after the first 10 months of this year, and a trade deficit approaching $100 billion is forecast for

1984.

A further rise in the dollar would have a punishing effect on our remaining exports and on domestic industries trying to compete with cheap imports." Solomon said, "A rapid and disorderly fall in the dollar, by contrast, could inject a source of price pressure into the U.S. economy at the worst time: when our expansion is reaching maturity, the amount of spare capacity left to reem is nearly exhausted, and the poten for inflationary effects is the

ploy

tial

Analysts have been predicting over the past three years that the dollar was overvalued and due for a slide.

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Mostly cloudy Sunday with rain Sunday night, tapering off Monday. High and Low Sunday in low to mid 50s.

The White House confims U.S. combat troops will leave Grenada and return home on Monday. Story on A-10.

PIRATES FALL

ECU rallied In the second half, but the Duke Blue Devils held on fop an 80-64 victory Saturday. (Page B-1)

Today's Reading

Abby..........................C-3 Classified..........

Arts..........C-10-13, D-2-4 Crossword........

..C-12 .

Bridge.....................C-12 Editorial............

A-4

Building..................B-16 Enterment........

C-14-16

Business........^..B-18-19 School Menus.,

D-14

THEREFLECTOR

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONSUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11, 1983    178 PAGES 12 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTS

Blacks Pick Jackson 2nd

NOW, Blacks Endorse Mndale's Campaign

Santa Claus Gives A Wave During Saturday's Parade

Parade Crowd

Grows larger

By ANGELA LINGERFELT * Reflector Staff WrUor The Greenville Jaycees Christmas parade Saturday, which included floats, horses, baton tvcirlers, bands, pretty girls and Santa Claus, went real well, according to Bobby Tripp, chairman of the event.

"We had the largest crowd weve had in a right good number of years. All week we heard it was going to rain and it didn't. That helped a lot," Tripp said.

(Please turn to A-1S)

By EVANS WITT Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Walter Mndale added the National Organization for Women and a Key group of Southern blacks to his lengthening list of supporters Saturday as his frontrunners bid for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination picked up new momentum.

First, the NOW board of directors voted overwhelmingly to issue the former vice president the first presidential endorsement ever made by the countrys largest feminist group;

"The endorsement of NOW will send a message to the majority of the women of this nation that Walter Mndale is the candidate who will be best for women and who can defeat Ronald Reagan, said NOW president Judy Goldsmith at a news conference announcing the decision. We are determined to help Mndale mobilize the gender gap.

Later Saturday, Mndale got the best part of a compromise and won the endorsement for the nations top job from the Alabama Democratic Conference, the first major statewide black group in the South to jump

into the presidential sweepestakes.

To soften the blow to Jesse Jackson - Mondales rival for the groups backing - the conferences delegate assembly endorsed the black presidential candidate for vice president. Conference vice chairman Alvin Holmes of Montgomery said the compromise of endorsing "a presidential slate rather than a single candidate was recommended by the group's executive committee.

To top Mndale s best weekend since October, his campaign displayed its organizational prowess by sponsoring more than 10.000 fund-raising parties across the country Saturday night to, watch his first national television campaign ad and raise $1.5 million in small contributions.

In early October, .Mndale sfiared the endorsements of the-'AFL-CIO and the National Education Association and handilv won the Maine

straw vote in a single two-dav stretch.

M 0 n d a 1 e w a s the overwhelming choice of the NOW board of directors for the first presidential endorsement the feminists group has ever given, winning the final vote after some last-minute changes by a 32-5 edge in its meeting here.

The former vice president had worked hard to win the NOW endorsement, both for

I Please turn to A-161

City Confirms Decision To Drop Reb Battle Flag

The city has confirmed a decision to replace a Confederate battle flag at the Town Cormoi with a G.S.A. banner considered "historically more correct" after looking into an objection to the battle standard voiced by a disgruntled resident.

The city studied the situation regarding the Town Common bannefs after Glenn Maughan, a student at East Carolina University, questioned why a British flag

and the Confederate battle standard were being flown here. The city removed the two flags until it could consult with the State Division of Archives and History and announced recently that new flags would be ordered to replace the Confederate banner and a city flag.

City Manager Gail Meeks said the city, in researching the matter, has discovered that in the period since the Pitt Countv Historical Soci

ety presented six flags for the Town Common in 1974. several discrepancies have occorred when flags were ordered to replace worn banners.

Mrs. Meeks said five of the flags presented as part of the bicentennial celebration were replicas of flags which have flown over the city, while the sixth gift was a new flag, the banner of the city of Greenville.

(Please turn to A-16>

SNOW MAN W AVES... A snowman in the Greenville Jaycees' Christmas parade waves at the crowd Saturday. (Reflector photos by Tommy Eorrest r

Vines: A Deer In Waiting

By ANGELA LINGERFELT Reflector Staff Writer If youre looking for an inexpensive, yet attractive. Christmas decoration to enhance your yard during the holiday season, try making a reindeer out of grapevines. Pauline Baker, a resident of Farmville, made one recently and she says its easy, cheap and fun to make.

"All you need is a lot of patience, some wire, some grapevines and some snippers and youve got yourself adeer, Mrs. Baker said.

The reindeer, which stands about four feet tall, is painted white and dotted with tiny clear Christmas tree lights. Two lights are situated on its head to look

like eyes, another on its nose is painted red. and many lights are entwined through its antlers.

"Its just beautiful at night when its lit up. The best thing about it is that theres less than $10 put into that deer. she commented.

To make one. she said, the only supplies needed are grapevines, snippers, wire, paint and Christmas tree lights. It took her about six hours to complete the one she made.

My husband went into the woods and cut a bunch of vines. The kind he cut is called cross vines (or wild grapevines). Mrs Baker said. The reason for using cross vines, she explained, is

because they are tough, bendable and last a long time.

"First, I cut the legs by cutting a bunch of vines the length I wanted the legs to be. Then I tied them together with wire. I did the body the same way, only I made the vines into a thicker bunch, she explained. The head was also made the same way, she said, except the vines were a shorter head-size

I*

cut into length.

The next step was snipping off all the vines that were sticking out. Then she attached the body pieces together by "mashing the vines ends of the legs and into the body and

head

Please turn to A-16)

Telephones:

In Just About Any Store

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

Have you noticed that more and more stores are selling telephones these days'? Its because of government deregulation.

It used to be that youd have to go to the local telephone company to have your needs met.

Sure, you still have to pay Carolina Telephone & Telegraph Co. for service. But CT&T is no longer renting telephones as they did in the past. Only customers who were renting telephones prior to deregulation are allowed to rent.

Because of deregulation, new customers have to purchase their own telephones now. And the only telephones being sold by CT&T are rental phonp that have been disconnected and returned to the phone company.

" Dick Flye. district commercial and marketing - manager for CT&T, said, FCC (Federal Communications Commission) deregulation has : caused the difference. Since deregulation, he ; said telephone business has become a free ^ market."

If you want a telephone and CT&T doesn t have the model you want (CT&T is restricted to what is available and doesnt have a full choice, Flye said) you might try Belk-Tyler^s, Sears, |C, Penneys, K-Mart, Nichols, Pair Electronics, Radio Shack, a Fast Fare, or any one of a num^r of other stores, where prices range from about $12 , i-

up to $300, depending on model. And the equipment available ranges from the standard dial desk set and small push-button models to cordless telephones, automatic dialers (which automatically dial pre-selected numbers) and automatic answering equipment.

How about telephone repair service?

Radio Shack offers repair service. So does CT&T. But the phone company will only repair the telephones it leases or sells.

Repair of leased phones is done at no charge. But Flye said there is a $15 to $25 flat charge, including parts. involved in servicing customer-owned phones. If the repair charge was much higher, Flye suggested it might be cheaper to purchase a new telephone.

While deregulation is limiting the phone companys business in telephones themselves, technology. Flye said, now enables CT&T to offer residential customers call-waiting service which allows a customer to get a beep tone while talking to one party to let them know there is another call coming in. The customer can then hold the original party on tie line, and answer

the second call.

Call forwarding," which allows a person to program calls to go wherever you are going when you leave home, is another service offered by CT&T, according to Flye.

Residential customers can also have speed dialing and three-way conference^ service.

With speed dialing, Flye said numbers that are called frequently can be programmed and by dialing a code, the full number will be dialed. The conference service allows a person to talk with two other parties at the same time.

Still another service offer^ by CT&T to residential customers is Subscriber Identification Number Assignment (SINA). With SINA service.

Flye said, a customers telephone will ring diffe    .......

uifferently to let the customer know that someone is calling another person in your house.

While new customers must now buy their telephones, the phone still has to be connected to telephone company lines.

But you can save on installation charges, Flye said, if you do as much work as you can

yourself.    ,    .

The cost of having CT&T install one telephone could be as much as $48.75, Flye said. But if the customer participates as much as he can, the price can be cut to $30.15.

For example, the basic service charge for a new senice is $18.80, while for an existing service the charge is $12.15. Additional charges are made for premises visits, for work done in the central office, for each telephone jack installed, for each location where wire nas to be pulled.

If you pull the wire yourself, do your own installation, you can save $11.60. And if you install the jacks yourself, you can save $7 per jack, according to Flye.

GRAPEVINE REINDEER ... Pauline Baker of Farmville adds the final touches to her reindeer she made from grapevines. The deer

T

is decorated with tiny clear-colored Christmas tree lights and a big red ribbon. (Reflector photo bv Angela Lingerfelt)

t





Schultz Enjoys Role On Winning Team

By Peter Meade

Although hes part of one of the most popular shows on television, iVBCs- The A-Team, Dwi^t Schultz is not recognized all that often when hes not playing Howling Mad Murdock.

I was standing in a video store in Los Angeles, says Schultz, and The A-Team was on. It was the first time Id been in a public place where people were watching, so I stood there. Then the guy next to me said, Hey, ever watch this show?

If it looks like Schultz and his macho mates are having fun during their Tuesday night romps, its not acting, because they are.

The fun comes through, doesnt it? says Schultz. But we must have the hardest working crew on television. -The stunts are a thrill to watch and the style is now copied a lot on TV.

The story of how Schultz got his A-Team role is almost as implausible as any of the series plots. He was playing Lord Byron in a production of The Keeper in Philadelphia when he got a request to fly out to California to read for the role of Murdock.

I was so tired by the time I got out there, says Schultz, and it was a three-hour audition. I did pretty bad and I felt awful. But they saw a tape I did for NBC two years ago and the casting director was pushing for me. So I got a second chance.

Second chances and second choices make up The A-Team. James Coburn had turned down the role of Hannibal Smith that George Pep-pard accepted, the role of Murdock was originally written with James Whitmore Jr. in mind and Dirk Benedict replaced Tim Dunigan after the two-hour pilot. Only Mr. T was a first-choice candidate.

T is confident and exuberant, says Schultz. He created his character. The rest of us do what actors do. From an actors standpoint its wonderful because of the variety. I can be an Englishman or an Irishman, very serious or very bizarre.

But when fans of The A-Team talk - more and more seem to be coming forward each week - its not Mr. Ts golden garb or the acting they talk about.

The stunts and action are responsible for a large part of the popularity, says Schultz.

George Peppard (r. foreground) stars as Hannibal Smith, the leader of NBCs The A-Team, airing Tuesdays. Smiths soldiers of fortune are (clockwise from foreground) B.A. (Bad Attitude) Baracus (Mr. T),Howling Mad Murdock (Dwight Scultz), Amy Allen (Melinda Culea) and Templeton The Face Peck (Dirk Benedict).





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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GREBW^ N.C





Mostly White Jury Convicts Klansman Of Murder

The Daily*Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11.1983    A-15

MOBILE, Ala (AP) - A

predominantly white jury Saturday convic

iturday convicted a 29-year-old Ku Klux Klansman 0 capital murder in the slitying of a black teen-ager wfwse battered body was hanged in a tree, and recommended he be sentenced to prison for life without parole.

Mobile County Circuit Judge Braxton Kittrell Jr. set sentencing for Jan. 19 for the defendant, Henry

rlaiivid iiajrs.

The jury of eleven whites and on^ black deliberated about 3>^ hours before returning the verdict against Hays in Ihe death of 19-year-old Michael Donald on March 21,1981, who allegedly was chosen at random in an effort to show Klan strength

Before the jury began considering a sentence recommendation, the defendant returned to the stand and denied he took part in the slaying, as he has throughout the trial.

His father, Bennie Jack Hays, told the jury before the sentence recommendation, I hope each and every one of your can live with yourselves, adding that he fektt the slaying was unjust.

Defense lawyer M.A.

Bubla Marsal, who had argued that Hays was singled out for prosecution because of his links to the Klan, said he was surprised that the jury returned a capital murder conviction and that he would appeal the conviction.

It will be an easy case to reverse on appeal, Marsal said.

In arguing for the death )enalty. Chief Assistant )istrict Attorney Tom Harrison said, "The only just response, the only acceptable response for killing a man simply because he is black, is not life without parole. I submit to you there is only one sentence that will right the wrong that was done to Michael Donald.

Marsal reminded the jurors that Hays accomplice, James Tiger Knowles, who testified against Hays, could receive no more than life in prison without parole under his guilty plea to a federal charge of violating Donalds civil rights.

The verdict and the sentence recommendation were returned in a somber courtroom where some 40 spectators, both white and black, wept. A young white juror also wept openly.

Knowl^ said Donald was randomly picked off the street and killed to show Klan strength in Alabama. Chief Assistant District Attorney Tom Harrison retraced the five days of testimony, then pleaded with the jury to convict Hays of Donalds murder, which he called a most grisly and gruesome event.

Harrison described Donalds slaying as the most atrocious crime committed in recent memory in this state, in this county.

The killing sparked an uproar in Mobiles black

community. The Rev. J^ Jackson led one of several protest marches in the city.

Marsal charged that the federal investigation that led to Hays' indictment was an attempt to get the Klansmans father, who also is a Klan leader.

Blarsal told the jurors that Hays was in court because he was the son of a man who is (a) head of the Klan.

Donald was savagely beaten and strangled. His body was hanged in a small camphor tree in an empty lot across the street from the house where Hays lived.

Hays denied that he killed Donald, and testified that he didnt Imow about the killing until someone told him about

Prosecutors built then case around the testimony of present and former KKK

members, including that of Knowles, 20, who has pleaded guilty to a federal charge of violating Donalds civil right. Knowles, who testified under a plea bargain agreement, awaits sentencing and could receive a life term.

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9





Public Forum

To the editor:

As we approach the blessed season of Christmas, Id assiyne that for many of us there is an accompanying feeling of sadness when we contemplate the turmoil, strife and upheaval that exists throughout the world. Consistently the news media reports acts of violence, terrorism and fanaticism. In countless areas of the Universe, factions are at war: religious sects fighting each other and groups in disagreement as to ideology. Moreover, our civilization lives in dread of nuclear annitlation.

Yet, all human beinn are children of Almighty God. As God's children, we areXbrothers and sisters. Some of us profess that God will inteQrene as to the wrong doing in society. But what about thepossibility and probability that God, Father of all mankind, gives each and everj; one of us free will and free choice? Wouldnt His ultimate wish be that we, as human beings, decide and take the necessary steps to come to terms always peacefully and exist caring for one another as members of Gods Universe and also as members of one family - His family?

How sad God must be when He observes His children and their behavior in todays world. Does He question: Why strife, greed and poverty when there is a choice, since you have free will and it is in your hands?

Helen Y. Trupp

1202 S. Overlook Drive

Greenville

To the editor:

It was my privilege to participate in Pitt County schools Close-Up seminar last week. This was an enlightening experience - a real learning experience!

"Close-Up" is a means and opportunity for our high school students to meet with, talk with, and learn from persons reiwesenting municipal, county and state government. During this two^iay program last Thursday and Friday (a vacation day for students) more than 100 students attend^ the sessions, paying a fee to do so. This in itself is remarkable.

The Pitt County session was truly outstanding. Educators from as far away as Guilford County came to observe and, along with a member of the state Department of Public Instruction, agreed that Pitt County has one of the best forums in North Carolina.

Our local educators, administrators, teachers-sponsors and " students are to be commended and congratulated for their participation. This type of interaction among students, teachers and public officials is one of the most worthwhile efforts in our schools. Those public officials who shared their knowledge of the workings of governmental agencies are also to be commended for their assistance in making this program such a great success.

It was good to be a part of Close-Up Pitt County. I wish all the citizens of Pitt County could have the opportunity to participate in such a rewarding experience. It makes one proud to know that our schools are leaders in the learning process.

Walter B. Jones Jr.

To the editor:

It seems these days that everyone is concerned about flags and which ones should be flown. No matter which Hag flies, someone can and will be offended.

Jewish Americans dont like Nazi flags; Black Americans dont like the Confederate flag. What about German-Americans, Japanese-Americans and Mexican-Americans? These people all have, at one time or another, had some ancestors wno have had bad dealirigs with Americans flying the American flag. Should we lake down all American flags because of these people?

> If we dont want to offend anyone, maybe we should just fly a white flag. That is basically what was done when City Hall removed the Confederate battle flag and the Union Jack from the Town Commons.

As one American (Southern American), I hope complete surrender to every little whim of everyone never happens.

The only wrong I can see in the way the flags were displayed is the total disgrace shown toward the Stars and Stripes by both City Hall and the Pitt County Courthouse. No person has mentioned the fact that both of these places are flying the American flag at the same level as all the other flags. Every true American should know that the American flag is always flown higher than other flags in the same location. That is what is important.

Norman Brinson

To the editor:

So often we dont take time to commend people who have done a good job, have gone beyond the little Blue Books of Rules and used good concerned common sense in their duties

as employees of the city of Greenville.

Some months ago we realized a tree in my front/side yard could possibly fall during a severe windstorm and damage utility wires and the corner of my house.

We requested through the proper channels and Mr. Dick Haddock came out and checked the tree and made recommendations. The following day, at the instructions of Mr. Haddock, the crew of Kenneth Sawyer, Bruce Mayo and Wesley Smith removed the tree to ground level and stacked

sections of it in lengths that could be handled by one man.

These men are to be commended for their care in and dround flower beds and shrubs. They did no damage to the

yard at all.    

I am thankful for men like these on our city payroll.

Ed Smith 701E. Fourth St.

Greenville

Letters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor r^erves the right to cut longer letters.

Mik

FfntilbrAbove And Beyond The Call Of Duty

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration had a funny way of dealing with Martin Feldstein when he strayed from White House orthodoxy.

Its made him the butt of jokes. Its tried to ridicule him into oblivion.

Feldstein wasnt a bureaucrat who was in place when the administration took office. Rather, the president himself chose Feldstein to serve him and the government.

This treatment has happened twice so far. Feldstein is the current victim. Feldstein is chairman of the presidents Council of Economic Advisers and a thoroughly conventional conservative economist. His offense is that hes been expressing thoroughly conventional conservative dictums.

Orthodoxy is his heresy.

Deficits do count, says Feldstein, and the thing to be done about them is to raise taxes. Otherwise, he says, high deficits will produce high interest rates, and high interest rates will produce yet another recession.

Ronald Reagan doesnt believe in deficits, either, but he believes even less in raising taxes.    *

And so his minions prepare a campaign to make Feldstein appear ridiculous.

Hey, says someone in the White House image room, lets give old Marty the Barbara Honegger treatment.

You remember Barbara Honegger, the Justice Department official who said the Reagan administration program to banish sex discrimination from the nations statutes was a sham.

You remember her because the White House response put her prominently in the news.

When Ms. Honegger said her piece last August and then resigned, the ridicule started.

Deputy Press Secretary Larry Speakes let loose with a sarcastic barrage.

The last time I saw her she was the Easter bunny at the White House Easter egg roll, said the presidential

spokesman.

I think she was playing an important role as a volunteer in the Easter egg role to make sure that all the visitors to the White House had a good time, Speakes added.

He went on: Its quite an ailmirable thing to do. Its not easy to dress up in that hot bunny suit. Ive never done it and Im ashamed to admit it.

Tom DeCair, chief spokesman for the Justice Department, where Ms. Honegger had held a $37,000-a-year job, piped in. She was, he said, only a low-level munchkin.

As you can imagine, that did the trick. It got the Honegger story onto the front page. It called new attention to her charges against the sex discrimination program. It caused womens leaders to rally around Ms. Honegger. It made newsworthy whatever she had to say then and henceforth.

The same routine was dusted off last week when the White House decided again to turn on one of its own, Feldstein with his hopelessly old-fashioned ideas about deficits.

Speakes was trotted out with his one-liners, intended to gag Feldstein, if not to bag him.

Speakes announced that Feldstein had been excluded from a presidential luncheon called to discuss economic matters. When he was informed that Feldstein had managed to have himself included on the guest list. Speakes said, "Maybe he wont make it to dessert.

And to cast further doubt on the status of the presidents adviser, Speakes continued his practice of pronouncing the economists name two ways, Feld-steen some of the time, Feld-stine the rest of the time. The correct pronunciation is

Feld-stine. - ---- --r

For the record, Feldstein says he still does not intend to leave until next September, when he will return to the Harvard economics faculty. It will take a direct presidential order to get him to leave, he says.

And, for the record. White House aides, speking anonymously, say the purpose of sending out Speakes to ridicule Feldstein -was to silence him, not to send him packing.

The day after Speakes performance, the White House leaked word, through an anonymous presidential aide, that Reagan found the episode tawdry. Reagan was reported to have slammed a newspaper on his desk and to have said he didnt like the way Speakes had spoken.

Otherwise, there has been no public apology for the public humiliation of Feldstein.

This is an administration that has complained of the difficulty of recruiting good people. It blames the conflict of interest laws, and the sacrifice they impose on public service.

But if it sends Martin Feldstein limping back to Harvard, the next good economist the White House asks to Washington may wonder if his reputation is more sacrifice than he's ready to make.

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

WASHINGTON - Heres a quiz for people who think theyve got an ear to the ground: America currently suffers from a critical shortage of certain cuddly objects of affection. What are the valuables in question?

If your answer centered on those little moon-faced, computer-generated Cabbage Patch dolls that have driven some shoppers to near-hysteria in the checkout line, you missed the boat. If, however, the notion of grandchildren crossed your mind, give yourself 10 points.

We sensed the great

America Finds A Shortage: Grandchildren

grandchild gap when a number of childless friends, married and single, complained that their parents had become full-time registered lobbyists for the baby cause. After years of encouraging independence and careerism, they reported, some parents had recently begun to hold forth about the wonder, mystery and untold benefits of children. Some, in fact, were counseling expedient marriage simply as a way to get the long-postponed third generation into production.

The collective nagging

E

from the older generation, which seems to worsen with the holidays, made us wonder whether the number of would-be grandparents has reached a record high.

Demographers, we learned, dont have a good fix on the problem. While the "median, age of first-time mothers hasnt budged much in the last 30 years (hovering consistently between 22 and 23), that statistic is increasingly meaningless; women who postpone a first child, after all, dont show up in the statistics until their first delivery. possibly 10 years

later, "You only enter the computations when you have the kids, confirmed Martin OConnell, the Census bureau's fertility expert. Thus, there are a lot of statistics waiting to happen. For now, a better indication of the grandchild shortfall is the. Bureaus "rate of childlessness index - in other words, the percentage of women who haven't given birth. During the 1970s childlessness rose dramatically.'' While nearly 36 percent of women ages 20 to 24 were childless in 1970, by 1980 the" proportion had

increased to 40.6 percent. Even larger jumps were recorded for both the 25-29 and 30-34 age groups.

The result is an unexpected downside ot the baby postponement boom: Would-be grandparents are going without.

Unfortunately for those

empty-nesters on the, grandchild watch, the long-range outlook promises few storks. O'Connell told our reporter the U.S. population is settling sown for the remainder of the decade. " There s nothing in any of the other social indicators that would indicate change in the future."

George

Gallop

Poll

Gene

Wang

WILSON, N.C. (UPI) -The security guard at Branch Banking & Trust Co. had obviously never heard of the Republican gubernatorial candidate.

Youre Congressman Who? he asked Rep. James Martin, who is passing up a bid for re-election to a seventh term and seeking the GOP nomination for governor.

Martin made a campaign foray last week into eastern North Carolina, a Democratic Party stronghold, to begin laying the groundwork for his gubernatorial campaign.

His day began slowly - a dozen people attended a

Congressman Who?

breakfast in Wilson, but about 60 showed up in Smithfield for a luncheon and a late afternoon reception in Dunn drew 50 people.

The rest of the eastern swing sent Martin to Fayetteville that night and Lum-berton the following morning before he flew to Asheville for a North Carolina Farm Bureau meeting and Greensboro that night to attend a fund-raising dinner for Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.

Martin spent the rest of the week in Charlotte and northwestern North Carolina, traditional Republican territory.

During the pre-dawn drive to Wilson, Martin said he had

been considering- for some time stepping down from the congressional seat he has held since 1972, even though he had become unbeatable in the 9th District.

As a Republican candidate for governor, he admits he faces a difficult race in a state with a 3-to-l Democratic voter registration edge, but points out his congressional victories occurred in a district where Democrats hold a 2-to-l edge.

He warned supporters he cannot win without unity in the Republican Party. If the GOP is divided, he said he doesnt stand a chance of swinging the needed Democratic votes to his side.

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Fed's Truce With Capitol Hill Ends

WASHINGTON - Thrown into the cauldron of Republican economic policy decisions now pending, an indictment by House Democrats charges that Chairman Paul Volckers stewardship of the Federal Reserve Board is a principal cause of lgh interest rates.

. The indictment is a still-secret House Banking Committee report on monetary policy that ends an eight-year truce between Capitol Hill and the nations central bank. The report assails Reserve Board secrecy in unusually strong language: The board denies any responsibility for the economys problems, and evinced a new determination to ponfuse the American public about its goals and actions, 'This level of secrecy and obfuscation is intolerable in a democracy.

In a knee-jerk reaction; Banking Committee Republicans prepared a dissent in defense of central bank elitism that might have been written by Chairman Volcker himself, but other Re-, publicans, including key administration officials, do not want to be harnessed to the Fed for the 1984 Section campaign.

' Such internal Republican disputation reflects the decision in the West Wing of the White House uiat economic adviser Martin Feldsteins high-tax crusade is bad politics. Presidential aides are coming to appreciate that Volcker and Feldstein,

who collaborate closely, are woven into the same austerity fabric that appeals to Wall Street but not Main Street.

Important administration policy-makers find httle to disagree with in the House report despite its intensely non-Republican antecedents. It constitutes a conscious effort by chairman Fernand St. Germain to return the Banking Committee to its Fed-baiting populism of the 1960s under the late Wright Patman of Texas.

St. Germain does not make the mistake of endorsing inflationist nostrums associated with Patman. He does echo the old populists attack on the secrecy surrounding the Feds 12 governors ensconced in their marble palace here determining he nations economic fate. The report contends that "the veil of secrecy covering the Feds Open Market Committee causes unnecessary volatility in our money markets and leads to unreasonably high interest rates.

The report calls for radical reform: abandonment of M-1 money supply as an economic target ; matching the chairmans term to the prraidents; announcement of Open Market Committee decisions the day they are made; transcribing and eventually releasing the committees deliberations; subjecting the Feds internal spending an eye-popping $151 million in 1981 to the

congressional appropriation process.

All this assaults the central banks cherished independence, including its freedom to spend as much as it wants. Noting that we have heard countless speeches from the Federal Reserve Board about the need to balanqe our federal budget, the report argues that those who write prescriptions should be the first to taste the medicine. Objection to congressional oversight would be the height of hyprocrisy for the Fed in light of Hie birds oft-spoken concern that entitlement programs be reined in.

The reflexive response from St. Germains Republican counterpart on the Banking Committee, Rep. Chalmers Wylie, took the GOPs traditional father-knows-best attitude toward the Fed: Absent any specialized knowledge, we continue to depend heavily on the quality of the analysis and the good judgment of the money managers in the Federal Reserve.'*

That so pleased the usually phlegmatic Volcker that he telephoned Wylie with praise. The word around the Banking committee, however, is that Wye was hot fully aware of what the chairman was talking about. His minority report was written by a committee staffer, Dr. Godfrey E. Briefs, an establishment economist who like many colleagues in Wall Street considers Volcker close to divine.

At the Smithfield luncheon. Martin was asked if he can work with the National Congressional Club, the conservative political organization founded by Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., and Thomas Ellis. Helms chief strategist,

"I have not yet gotten the support of Tom Ellis and Carter Wrenn (the clubs executive director), Martin said, "but Iwould welcome it when they decide Im the most conservative candidate."

After Martin announced earlier this year, Ellis began pushing club protege William Cobey and questioned Marlins conservatism. But Helms publicly said he felt Cobey would be a strong candidate for lieutenant governor and Cobey expressed more interest in a congressional campaign.

The only other announced GOP candidate for governor is Ruby Hooper, the Burke County Republican chairman.

Throughout his travels in the East, Martin touched on the same basic themes, sometimes with surprising candor.

I will not make a ^^om-mitment or promise to oj^ pose any new tax increases, he said in Wilson. I would say to you that taxes would' be the last place I would look. I believe very firmly there are other places we can look to before raising taxes. He said he is making only one commitment for highway construction: quick completion of an Interstate 40 connector from Wilmington to Benson.

The Wilmington area is the only one in the state where unemployment is higher this year than last year, he said, and e road is needed to allow the states major port to meet competition from Norfolk, Va., and Charleston, S.C.

PRINCETON. N.J. - Although most Americans currently hold negative opinions about the performance of the United Nations Organization, relatively few would like to see the United States give up its membership in that world body.

It addition, two out of three persons interviewed in a recent Gallup survey reject the idea that the U.N. should move its headquarters out of the United States,

In the current survey. 36 percent feel the U N. is doing a good job in trying to solve the problems it has had to face, while 51 percent sav it is doing a poor job. The latest findings are virtually unchanged from those recorded in a June 1982 survey.

Americans have held more negative than positive views about the U.N. since 1970. In that year a slim 44 percent to 40 percent plurality gave the U.N. a favorable performance rating.

Few W ant L'.S. To W ithdraw

Only one person in eight H2 percent) thinks the United States should withdraw from the world body, while eight in 10 (79 percent) think we should not. This attitude has prevailed overwhelmingly in surveys conducted since 1951. The most widespread sentiment in favor of U.S. withdrawal was recorded in 1975, when 16 percent held this view. The low point of 8 percent was found in 1963.

Only 1 In 5 Wants U.N. To Leave Only one person in five (19 percent i in the current survey feels the United Nations should leave the United States, its headquarters since it was founded in 1945. following World War II. More than three times as many. 67 percent, disagree.

Earlier this year a senior U.S. delegate voiced his frustration with the world forum by inviting the U.N. to leave the United States. President Reagan suggested that the U.N. meet ..here for six months each year and in Mosoow for the other six_ Following is the question asked to measure attitudes toward

theU.N.:    .    .

"In general, do you feel the United Nations is doing a good job or a poor job in trying to solve the problems it has had to face?

Here is the trend:

United Nations Performance

Oct.. 7-10.

1982......

1980......

1975......

1971

1970

1967

1956

Good

Poor

No

job

job

opinion

36%

51%.

13%

36

49

15

31

53

16

. 33

51

16

35

43

22

44

40

16

.49

35

16

.51

37

12

\

woiiieii, yuuiigci    'lu    v.. ----------

mal education ended at the high school level are somewhat more inclined than their counterparts to give the U N. a favorable performance rating.

However, political affiliation is not an important consideration, with roughly equal proportions of Republicans, Democrats and Independents sharing perceptions of the effectiveness of the U.N.

Even among the majority that feels the U.N. is doing a poor job, three in four do not want the United Slates to quite the U.N.

The latest results are based pn in-person interviews with 1,513 adults, 18 and older, conducted in more than 300 scientifically selected localities across the nation during the period Oct. 7-10.

For results based on samples of this size, one can say with 95 percent confidence that the error attributable to sampling and other random effects could be 3 percentage points in either direction.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C Sunday. December 11,1983    A*7Government Forecasts Doubling Of Nuclear Power

By MATT YANCEY Associated Press Writer W ASHINGTON (AP) - The amount of electricity generated by nuclear power plants in the United States will double in the next seven years, according to the latest government estimates.

But after that, the future of the "peaceful atom" as a major energy source both in America and abroad is clouded by largely financial - rather than safety or technical -uncertainties, according to several new studies.

The United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency based in Vienna, Austria says in a report just made available that the share of the world's electricity generated by nuclear

power will increase 50 percent by the end of 1985._

^Based 'on 52 plants now at least halfway through construction, nuclear generating capacity in the United States alone will double to 114 gigawatts by 1990 and will represent 19 percent of the nation's electricity then compared with 13 percent now. says the government's Energy Information Administration.

By the year 2000, the U.N. agency expects nuclear power plants to be providing 23 percent of the world's electricity. The United States is expected to have between 116 and 141 reactors operating then, compared with 77 now, says the Energy Information Administration.

But beyond the turn of the century, the atom could fall back

to zero as a source of U.S. electricity by the year 2020 if no new plants are ordered. Or it could climb to represent 30 percent of the generating capacity if there is a nuclear revival, the agency said in a report it released Friday.

A more likely scenario, the agency said, is that the United States will have between 120 and 230 nuclear plants generating about one-fourth of the nation's electricity in 2020.

But that assumes that utilities, after canceling 87 plants between 1975 and 1983, will begin reordering them again in the late 1980s if regulatory, construction and financing restraints are eased.

Still another report released Saturday, however, said that is the last thing that utilities in the United States or elsewhere should do. This report was released bv the. World watch __ Institute, a non-profit, Washington-based research institute.

"National leaders continue to be mesmerized by the once-great hopes placed in nuclear power and fail to assess its economic performance objectively." said Christopher Flavin, the author of the 81-page Worldwatch report.

"In several nations, electricity from new nuclear power plants is significantly more exf^nsive than electricity from new coal-fired plants." Flavin said. ,

Only in a few countries - France. Belgium, Canada and Japan among them does nuclear power still represent a bargain over coal or, in some cases, even over oil and gas. concluded the Worldwatch report. ,    -

"When new generating capacity is needed, utilities will have many more options than wheii they last ordered plants." the report said.

Although electricity from photovoltaic solar cells is now five to 10 times more expensive than power from nuclear plants now under construction, the costs should come pretty close to equal by 1990. Worldwatch said.

The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency, which has promoted the growth of nuclear power throughout the world, acknowledged in its report that the costs of atomic plants

have increased by as much as five times in some instances in constant, uninflated dollars over the past 10 years.

However, it said that among the countries from which it collects statistics, nuclear power was "clearly documented" as being less expensive than electricity from both oil-fired and coal-burning plants, except in regions where coal is abundant and cheap.

Standardizizng plant designs - France and Canada have done it, and reactor manufacturers in the United States are trying - could reduce the cost of a multi-reactor atomic power plant by up to25 percent, the U.N. agency said.If You See One, You See Both

GREENVILLE. Texas (UPI) - Butch and Gwen Clausens 2-month-old twin boys are alike in every way. so much so that the couple went to the district attorney's office to find out who was Brian and who was Ryan.

For t-hree weeks the Clausens were not sure which of their twins was which. They remedied that Friday by having the

Hunt County district attorney s office match the babies' footprints with those taken at birth.

"We got it straightened out yesterday." Clausen said Saturday. "My wife's got one of them marked behind the ear right now."

Clausen said the bovs were identical.

"They weigh the same, same height, same birth .^jnark. same everything. They've both got one toe - the middle toe on the right foot - that's smaller ,than rest of the toes, 1 just didn't know." he said.

Clausen said he hopes to find a distinguishing characteristic soon.GREENVILLE JEWELERSANNUAkOmiSTMAS SALE IS HERE!FABULOUS PRICES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT-HURRY!

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Catamounts Earn Championship Berth

By The Associated Press .GREENVILLE, S.C. -Western Carolina rode the Mssing arm of quarterback Jeff Gilbert and the running of Melvin Dorsey to defeat Southern Conference rival Furman 14-7 here Saturday in the semifinals of the NCAA Division 1-AA football playoffs.

.The win moved the Cata-ipounts into a Dec. 17 championship showdown in

Illinois, winner over Nevada-Reno in the other semifinal game.

Gilbert completed 24 of 45 pass attempts for 202 yards and Dorsey gained 102 yards rushing.

Star Furman running back Stanford Jennings had his lowest rushing total of the year with 25 yards in 13 carries.

Western Carolina took a 6-0 lead on the strength of two

first from 30 yards out with 4:12 left in the first period and the second was a 52-yarder with 1;06 left in the half.

Furman moved out to a 7-6 lead in the third quarter after an interception by Paladin defender Gary Keller. Paladin quarterback David Charpia hit Billy Risher for a 26-yard reception to the four and fullback Dennis Williams carried it over from the two aftffl-a penalty.

nyijoillj; 3IIUWUUW.il ill icau UU UJC ailCllKUl Vl VWU aii. a pvimivj.

TiffflestoiHigainsi- Southenr-'BeaniBiasuccrfieldh^lSrthe Early-ia-4he-final quarter,

Western Carolina, keyed by a 46-yard ramble by Dorsey from the Catamounts 19 to the Furman 38, scored on a four-yard plunge by Dorsey. The 11-play, 90-yard drive gave Western. Carolina a 14-7 lead.

Furmans Charpia, a key in the teams 10-2-1 season, hit 14 of 33 passes, but had three interceptions including one at the end of the game when Furman was driving. Western

Carolina takes a record of 11-2-1 into the finals.

Smith, Dolensky Lead I Upset Over Bruins

H14 e-7

W.Carolina....................a

Furman..........................0

W Car.-Biasucci30FG W Car -Biasucci52FG FurmanD Williams 2 run (Esval kick I

W. Car -Dorsey 4 run i West pass from Gilbert

A-l,1.034

:L0S ANGELES (AP) -Rhil Smith and Alan Dolensky cpmbined for 35 points and -Stored four points each iiUhe.

final 1:58 of play Saturday to liad New Mexico to a 65-60 upset victory over sevnth-ranked UCLA in a non-cpnference college basetball ^ihe at Pauley Pavilion, -^ith, who scored 18 points, piit the Lobos ahead for good vflien he made a driving layup \Oth 1:58 to go. That made it 57-56.

-Neither team could score uhfjl two free throws by Smith \uth 37 seconds left gave New

handed shooting netted 12 points in each half. He also grabbed 10 rebounds.

Young was joined in double figure^y 7-foot center Akeem 0 ajuwon, who finished with

11 points, 12 rebounds and hve blocked shots.

. At the half, however, Olaw-juwon had only one point, two rebounds, one ijlwdc and two goal-tending violations.

First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts

Fumbles-lost Penaltiesvards Time of possession

W.Car. Fur

24

44-147

202

1

24-45-2

fi-n

-

8-47

34:42

12

27-18

190

1

14-33-3

10-3Q

3-

8-53

25:18

INDIVIDl \I.I.K\I)KRS RL'SHISG-W.Carolina Dorsey lO-Kfik L. Williams 15-40. Furman Jennings 13-25. D Williams 7-7 PffiSlNG-W Carolina Gilberf 24-45-2-202. Furman Charp:a 14-33-1-190.

RECEIVTNG-W Carolina Rasheed 7-88. DeLapp 3-34 Furman Wright 4-48. Risher .5-94. Borders 5-48

CARBONDALE, 111. -Cornerback Terry Taylor picked off two passes and ran one of them back for a touchdown Saturday to lift Southern Illinois to a 23-7 victory over Nevada-Reno in the NCAA Division 1-AA football semifinal.

A stingy Saluki defense limited the Wolfpack to 89 yards-otHhe-ground and-39 yards in the air en route to the victory.

The first half belonged to SI kicker Ron Miller, who booted field goals of 35,42 and 19 yards to give the Salukis a 9-0 halftime lead.

Nevada-Reno slashed the Saluki lead to 9-7 at 2:20 of the third quarter, however, when when Anthony Corley ran the ball in from 2 yards out, followed by Tony Zendejas

conversion. - .........

But SIU finally broke the game open at 4:17 of the

fourth quarter when Taylor intercepted an Eric Beavers pass and ran it back 24 yards for the score. Millers point-after attempt was good, giving him 50-of-50 for the year and a 16-7 Saluki lead.

Less than a minutejater, Taylor hauled in nother Beavers pass to set up a 2-yard run by Derrick Taylor and Millers extra-point at-temptt was good, icing the victory for the Salukis.

The triumph gave SIU .a Berth m the DrvisioiTTAA"

championship game against Charleston. S;C.. next Satur-Western Carolina in dav.

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Hunter Greene increased the: margin to five points by lutting two foul shots with 24 slconds remaining. The Rrins werent closer than t^ree points after that.

UCLA, which fell to 3-1. led tfirpughout the first half and HfcW a 39-28 advantage at the intermission. It was 43-32 with

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IJlminutes remaining when the Lobos outscored the

Shins 16-1 over a span of 6:09 ti go ahead 48-44. i^Fhe Bruins then scored eiit straight points to take a 52-48 lead with 7:22 left, but managed only eight more points after that.

Dolensky finished with 17 points and Tim Garrett added 10 for the Lobos, who have

WVll lUUI

starting the season with -two losses.

Ralph Jackson led the Bruins with 15 points. Reserve center Brad Wright added 12 points for UCLA while Kenny Fields, the Pacific-10 Conference player of the year as a junior last season, was held to 10 points.

Choosefrom a hugh selection of full poinsettia-plants potted insix inch pots with red or white blooms. Bows and foil wrap available. Free delivery to Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Houston (6).......71

St. Mary's.........55

HOUSTON (AP) - Michael Youngs 24 points paced the sixth-ranked Houston to a 71-55 win over St. Marys of San Antonio in a nonconference college basketball game Saturday night.

It was the fifth straight win for the Cougars. 5-1.

Youngs consistent, left-

Shop Mor)day Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 10 p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

Student Condos

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RINGGOLD TOWERS

At The Campus East Carolina University

Were building a special place for East Carolina University students to live next to campus in their own private, secure, air-conditioned condominium uniti, Surrounded on three sides by ECU property, Ringgold Towers is closer to classrooms than some on-campus dormitories. Downtown Greenville is one block away.

Three floorplans are available, and uniti are completely furnished. Each unit will be individually owned either by students and their parents or by investors renting to students.

Recent changes in tax laws make ownership of this type property advantageous for both investors and parents of students. We have full information on these units including a CPAs forecasted statement of operations. Wed like to show you how Ringgold Towers can provide a special place for your atudent to live and provide you with an excellent investment requiring very little down payment.

Ringgold Development Co., Inc. 105 Commerce Street P.O. Drawer 568 Greenville. NC 27854 (919) 355-2698

Can Collect

(Alter January 1, 1984; NC 1-800-672-8229; Outside NC 1-800-334-1135

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday, December 11.1983 g.-jSAldridge r' Southerland Realtors

ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND 756-3500

tay Spears, Realtor -Office Hoi

During Non-Office Hours Call 758-4362756-3500PUBLIC NOTICE

10.35% FINANCING

For A Limited Time, We Have 10.35% Financing Available On The Following Homes And Townhouses. It Will Only Last A Couple Months, So Time Is Wasting! Call Us For The Important Details!

KENSINGTON PARK - located-directly behind the Greenville Athletic Club, a community ol uncommon townhouses and flats. Various imaginative floor plans. Prices are $42,900, $45,900, $46,900, $47,500, $49,900, $51,900 and $52,900. 10.35% financing available for first 26 units, however, applications must be in within next 2 months! ^

SHENANOAH-mUQE 2 -bedrooi^ U/i

bath townhouses. 7 units available with N.C. Housing money. Prices range from $39,500 to $42,900.

WILDWOOD VILLAS - 2 bedroom, 2V2bath townhouses available with this 10.35% financing for limited time. Close to ECU, each bedroom has a private bath. Ideal for students or 2 adults. $42,900.

GREENRIDGE - Hospital Location. Townhouses. 2 bedrooms, family room, kitchen with eating area, very close to hospital. $37,500.NEW HOMES TH AT QOALIFYi=OR THIS 10.35 % MONEY

CAMBRIDGE 2 homes ready for occupancy. Both brand new, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, family room with fireplace, huge kitchen with eating area, wood deck off family room. Both priced below appraisal at $55,000, with this low interest money available!

CHERRY OAKS Under construction, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch on wooded lot. 1,850 square feet of area with the space where you want it. Tremendous great room with fireplace and extra large master bedroom with private bath. Let us show you this plan! $69,500.

Our other re-sale homes listed in the ad in the $40s and less probably will qualify for this low interest money. Now is the time to act! Call us for details.

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

* 49,900-106 Emmas Place. Duplex, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath each side. S400 per month income.

53.500-Start earning $S today on this excellent investment property. This brick front-back duplex includes two stoves, refrigerator, gas/FWA heating, central air, new hot water heater,

^    wasner/dryer hook-ups ior both aparimoiuS,

double garage downstairs. Excellent rental history.

55.000Duplex. $6,000 per year income, close to ECU,

. 2--  noo/f roodltion excelenf rntiirn.

59.500-R'iverbluff. Duplex. 1550 square feet total. 2 bedrooms each side, assumable financing, balance of $37,000.00. Age 2% years.

61.500-White Hollow Drive 2 duplexes, $61,500 each. Presently rented, all brick, super location, financing available. Could arrange package with these two or 4.

64.000-Shenandoah-2 duplexes, $64,000 each. Presently rented for $290 a side. 12% assumable financing with approximate balance ol $52,000 on each one.

150.000-Nine Unit Apartments on corner of Paris Avenue and Halifax St. near Dickinson Ave, Excellent rental history.

250.000Commercial Building. Over 35,000 sq. ft. with railroad siding on Dickinson Ave. Parking available.

185,000-

139,000-

129,900-

119,900-

105,000-

93,500-

92.500 90,000

89.900-

89.500

87.500

85.900-

79.900-

Homes of this caliber are not available in the Greenville area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Route 9, the home has 3800 square feet, sits on 3 acres of land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential for 5, formal areas, huge family room with fireplace, recreation room, many extras.

LynndaleCedar farmhouse. 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer, stained hardwood floors, 2 fireplaces, solar hot water heat, kitchen with Jenn-Aire, many extras.

Magnificent 3000 square foot traditional home in Cherry Oaks. Lovely decor, immaculate condition. Features all formal areas with master suite downstairs, 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs, plus mother-in-law suite with bedroom, kitchen/sitting room and bath.

This stately home features all formal areas, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths and 2 half baths, oHice and playroom! Dual heat pumps and a beautiful lot complete the picture. Definitely for the discriminating family.

Nearly 3,000 square feet in this lovely country home. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. One bedroom has a sitting room and outside entrance. Large family room with fireplace as well as a sun room.

Brook Valley. This 3 or 4 bedroom Williamsburg with great room, dining ropm, kitchen and three baths is ready for Immediate occupancy. Sit in the screened-ln porch and watch the action of the 2nd tee in this new offering.

Brook Valley. Attractive 2 story in this wonderful area. 4 bedrooms, Vh baths, formal entry foyer, living room apd dining room.

Baywood-For the contemporary taste, enjoy the seclusion of Baywood in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with many special features such as sunken tub, Jenn-Aire range. Parquet oak floors in foyer and dining room. Double garage and large deck to enjoy at the end of the day. Your vacation home at home!    ., ,

Brook Valley. Dramatic contemporary ranch! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace, deck, playroom and beautiful home on over an acre sized lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large family room with fireplace, formaf areas, double garage. Low interest financing available. Over 5 000 square feet within walking distance of the downtown area. Excellent house for fraternity. Pamlico River. Beautiful permanent home only 25 miles from Greenville! On the water with pier, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room with cathedral celling and fireplace. Deck circles home with screened porch, full basepient-garage.

Cherry Osks. Fantastic 4 bfidroom, 3 full bath, split level on heavily wooded lot in this desirable area. Family room with fireplace, formal areas, roomy kitchen with eating area, screened porch, and closed in garage In recreation room. A lot tor

Cherry Oaks. Large 3 bedroom, 2 full bath brick ranch In this desirable area. Foyer, formal areas, family room with fireplace, great color scheme.

79.900Overlook Drive - Space! Over 3,000 square feet of heated area for less than $80,000! 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace, office for dad, workshop, wooded lot in this wonderful location. Better hurry on this one!

79.900Almost 1800 square feet home in Cherry Oaks. Excellent floor plan, all formal areas, double garage. Seller with consider lease/purchase.

78,000Cherry Oaks. 1800 square feet of luxury! Gracious sniry icysr, stained hardvrscd ficors, sunken great room with brick fireplace, kitchen equipped with Jenn-Aire rancge, 3 bedrooms, Vh baths, and garage for storage! Contemporary design, very functional floor plan.

77.500Belvedere. Beautiful 3 bedroom, batn rancn on wooded lot in this popular area. Spacious den, private study, large playroom, 2 fireplaces, screened back porch and privacy fence. All for under $80,000!

76.900Grifton Country Club. Well built custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial. Formal areas, large den.

76.500Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken great room with old brick fireplace, slate foyer, super floor plan! ..

74.500Camelot. Like new ranch with contemporary accents. Great room with fireplace, formal dining room, modern kitchen with eating area, 3 bedrooms, private study or office, and single car garage. Huge corner lot.

73.900GriftonBetween Greenville and Kinston, this custom built 1700 square foot brick home offers the best of town and country combined. All formal areas, including sunken living room, slate foyer, separate laundry room, Vh baths, double garage. Great screened porch and brick patio.

73.900Located 16 miles from Greenville, 12 miles from Kinston, perfect for Dupont people. Custom built, slate foyer, sunken living room, screened porch, rose garden aand much more.

69.900Large 3 bedroom ranch located on over 13 acres of land, only 10 miles from Greenville. For country lovers, this could be the one, possible Federal Land Bank financing.

69.900River Hills. Contemporary ranch on wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, great room with fireplace, and deck.

69.500Cherry Oaks. Under construction. 1850 square feet ranch with fantastic plan! Huge great room with fireplace, formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, including master suite, and 2 full baths. Space in great room and master is fantastic. 10.35% financing!

69.500Fairlane. Charming 2 story Cape Cod in great location. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large kitchen, master bedroom downstairs. Really nice!

69.500Chocowinity Bay. Plan to enjoy next summer in this 3 bedroom, 1% bath river cottage. Large deck overlooking the Pamlico River. Nice wooded lot and lots of storage.

67.900Stratford. Almost like country living but in the heart of town! Large den with corner fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge screened porch, fenced back yard. Lots of privacy!

67.500Westwood. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in mint condition. Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.

66.900Red Oak. Great room with vaulted ceiling is the highlight of this charming contemporary. Large corner lot, extra insulation. Indirect lighting are just a few extras. This is a must see!

66.900Ragland Acres. Beautiful floor plan includes formal areas, study, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport. Lovely decor, large rooms. Assumable 9%%VAIoan.

66.900Red Oak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, traffic free circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace.

65.900Lake Eltsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suite, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with fireplace, immaculate interior.

65.500Located on quiet dead-end street within walking distance of schools! Over 1800 square feet with huge great room with fireplace, formal areas and super kitchen with eating area. Williamsburg styling. Better hurry!

83,000Country Living. Yet only a coupfe miles from Greenville city limits, or the industrial park. This Southern Colonial has the charm of another time. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace, modern kitchen.

82.900Riverhills. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on an extra deep wooded lot is In immaculate condition. With living room, dining room and separate family room with fireplace. Its a great find for $62,900.

62.900Riverhills. Split level with 3 bedrooms and 2V: baths, living room, family room and kitchen with greenhouse window, all situated on a lovely wooded lot.

62.500Three bedroom ranch conveniently located in Dellwood. This attractive home features formal living and dining rooms,'den with fireplace and eat-in kitchen.

62.500Westwood. Excellent all brick ranch on well fsndscaped 4ot: Ail formal areas, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, garage, covered patio. Owner will sell FHA, VA or conventional.

62.500Forest Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace and wood insert.

Me; eauiiiui woouBiiiot:'

59^900-Camelot. Almost now contemporary ranch. Great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths.

59.900Contemporary close to schools and shopping. Decks and glass galore! Huge great room, step saving kitchen, two large bedrooms, 2 full baths, loft area and full basement.

59.900Near University. 4 bedroom, 2 bath two story on well landscaped corner lot. Formal living room, kitchen-den combo, screened porch and workshop for dad. Very well kept interior.

59,500Move right into this freshly painted 3 bedroom home in Red Oak! 8% FHA loan gives you the best payments in town.

59,000Orchard Hills. Darling 3 bedroom home on a private cul-de-sac. 3 bedrooms, including master with sliding doors to deck. Great room with fireplace, kitchen with many extras, mud room. Great price!

58.900This 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch is located in the city and ready for immediate occupancy. Home features formal areas, large great room with fireplace, kitchen and large mudroom and carport. Over 1800 square feet for only $58,900.

57.900Red Oak. 4 bedroom ranch like this one is hard to find. Formal entry foyer and living room, family room, garage with automatic door opener. Now the best part, 9V2% assumable loan with low equity. Better hurry!.

56.500Convenient location. This three bedroom, 2 bath ranch located on a dead end street has privacy plus convenience. Formal areas, den with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. Fenced back yard.

55.900Ayden. Choice brick ranch on large fenced, corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. A lot for the money!

55.900Hardee Acres. FHA 245 10%! Yes, you can afford it. Cute as a button, 3 bedrooms, 1# baths, beautiful deck and pool. Dont miss it!.

55.500Grifton Country Club area. Maintenance free 3 bedroom ranch. Formal areas, large back porch and double garage. Beautifully landscaped.

55.000Elm Street. Super location, great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, 3 bedrooms, fenced yard. Cape Cod styling.

55.000Cambridge. 2 brand new 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranches, entry foyer, formal living room, den with fireplace and kitchen with eating area. Wood deck off the back. Almost complete, with 10.35% financing!

55.000Elm Street. This 3 bedroom, IV2 bath, air conditioned home oflers the unique feature of sloping ceiling in three rooms to add even more spaciousness to this well planned and constructed home. The screened in back porch overlooks a spacious fenced in back yard filled with pines, dogwoods, and azaleas.

52.900Shamrock Terrace. 3 bedroom brick ranch on huge corner lot. Beautiful hardwood floors throughout, eat-in kitchen, family room with fireplace, realty nice interior.

52.900Winterville. Double sized corner lot, beautiful 3 bedroom brick home featureing hardwood floors, sunken den with fireplace and deck.

52.900Hardee Acres. Lovely 3 bedroom ranch in this fine area. Great room, kitchen with many extras, breakfast area. Beautifully decorated.

52.500Grifton. Good assumable loan! Brick ranch features formal areas, large family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and large screened porch.

51.500Singletree. Immaculate 3 bedroom ranch with warm earth tone decor. Owner financing is available at below market rates!.Your Residential Sales Team

49.900University Area. Great location in a nice neighborhood area. This 3 ,bedroom, 1 bath, 1380 square feet brick ranch with eat-in kitchen and great room with fireplace, has extra insulation, new master bedroom carpet, new utility porch and has been rewired. The comfort of this warm home makes it very affordable.

49.900Edwards Acres. 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet circle. Almost new, with family room, and roomy kitchen with separate hreaktast area, Assumabie financing available with affordable monthly payments.

48.900Eastwood area. 3 bedrooms, great room, kitchen with eating area, excellent condition, central air.

47,50Cuitci. AtiCtiVi 3 ueiuiiis, c bain brick nome on an acre lot. Only 8 years old with gas pac heating system. Large storage building in the \ rear of property.

47.900BethelYoull love this 1 acre lot with large back yard in Bethel. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central heat and air conditioning, plus 8V2 % VA loan!

47.500Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, bath, tamily room, kitchen with eating area. Only minutes from Greenville.

47.500University area. Nice quiet neighborhood. Three large bedrooms. IV2 bath brick home. New heating system with 10 year warranty. Hardwood floors. Very nice!.

45.900GreenbriarThis three bedroom, IV2 bath ranch with central heat and air is in move-in condition. Conveniently located, its priced to sell at $45,900.

45.000Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home. Living room with fireplace, pine paneled den, garage and workshop.

45.500Very attractive 3 bedroom, 1V2 bath brick ranch on tremendous lot. Ga^' furnace and nice carport. Lovely area in Farmvilfq.

44.900Excellent beginner home in established neighborhood. This home features 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, living room with fireplace, efficient eat-in kitchen and central air. Just in time for N.C. Housing money.

44.500Rock SpringsCute 2 or 3 bedroom bungalow on quiet traffic free circle. Family room with fireplace, wooded shady lot, Better hurry!

42.0004 bedroom, 2 bath cottage style house in Meadowbrook area. Family room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, detached storage building and workshop.

39.500University Area. 2 bedroom bungalow only a block from campus! Recently remodeled with new carpet and wallpaper. Modern kitchen with new cabinets and counter tops. Really spacial!

39.000This 3 bedroom, one bath ranch features large living room and kitchen-dining combination. Located just outside the city on a large lot. Makes for an excellent starter home.

29.900GriftonSpecial financing available! Features large great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace, 3 bedrooms and living room.

27.900MacGregor Downs. Over 3 acre wooded building site in this fine area.

12.500Cherry Oaks. Residential building lot. 115 x 175 in well established section of this desirable subdivision. Winterville School district, county taxes only.

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110,000Club Pines. Brand new 2 story on corner lot. Finished hardwood floors, beautifully decorated. 4 bedrooms, Vh baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace. Custom construction with immaculate attention to detail.

39.900Colonial Heights. 3 bedroom brick ranch close to schools and shopping. Family room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, large corner lot.

48.000Close to university. 3 bedroom ranch on E. 3rd Street. Family room with fireplace, formal dining room, remodeled kitchen with eating area. Pay $7,500 down and assume 12% fixed rate mortgage.

87.500Tucker Estates. Only a transfer makes this beautiful home available. Four bedrooms, including master suite, 2V2 baths, .formal living and dining room, family room with fireplace. Immaculate interior, traffic free cul-de-sac.

65.900Camelot. The 1978 Parade of Homes winner is back on the market! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken great room with old brick fireplace, fenced back yard. It could be the winner for you in 1984.

5^ 900Greenbriar. 3 bedroom, IV2 bath ranch In this convenient location. Family room with fireplace, roomy kitchen with eating area and built-in microwave.

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Carolina Today

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday. December 11 1983    C-15

Bible-land tours and jewelry to mark Americas 400th anniversary are among topics to be aired during the coming week over Carolina Today. The earlv morning weekday talk show, broadcast over WNCT-TV. Channel 9. Greenville, is co-hosted by Slim Short and Shauna Barnaby. The calendar for the coming week is:

Monday - 6:40 a.m.. Katherine Lewis will talk about communication in school about homework.: 7:15 a.m., Sherwood Alltox oi Bible Land Tours will be the guest; 7:25 a.m.. Fred Lilly will talk about Sociai Security; 7:40 a.m., the topic will be food for the holidays.

Tuesday - 6:40a.m.. healthbreak; 7:15 a.m., Jennis Allen will discuss the "Invalid Finder Project"; 7:40 a.m.. the topic will be how to shop for the larger lovely lady.

Wednesday - 6:40 a.m., education s^tlight; 7:15 a.m.. the topic will be books to give as Christmas presents; 7:25 a.m.. Glenn Swanson will talk about national drunken- and drug-driving awareness; 7:40 a.m., the topic will be 400th anniversary jewelry by Carolista. t Thursday - 6:40 a.m., Susan Hardy with details on Christmas gifts to bake; 7:15 a.m.. Hope Tyndal topic is a -Carolina Christmas; 7:40 a.m.. the topic ,will be Christmas around the home,

. Friday - 6:40 a m. the subject is gifts for the family athlete; 7:15 a.m.. .Jeff McAllister will discuss home meals; -7:25 a.m., Henry Aldridge will answer questions about - dentistry: 7:40 a.m., the local plant doctor, Eddie Harrington, 7 will be the guest.

NCNB Music Contest

CHARLOTTE - North Carolina National Bank will again sponsor a statewide music competition in 1984, but with one important change. Instead of one-year scholarships awarded for the past two years. NCNB will offer two' four-year scholarships as prizes in its annual competition.

Regional auditions will be held across the state on Jan. 14 and a final competition will be held in Charlotte Feb.

Wilson and Winston-Salem, with winners to go to Charlotte on.

The competition is open to North Carolina residents wjio have not reached the age of 20 and who are not enrolled in an institution of higher learning. Competition includes strings, woodwinds.

brass, percussion, harp, piano, classical guitar, and voice.

Application deadline is Jan. ;3. For applications, contact local music teachers or write to: Ms. Shelby Graham. Tl.5-4. NCNB Corporation. Charlotte. N. C.. 28255

The Perfect Place For YOUR Party

Preliminary auditions will be in Favetteville. Marion.

Hospitality

House

Bounty Mutiny Set To Music^

MESSIAH TODAY - Some singers of the Greenville Choral Society are shown in rehearsal for the presentation of Handel's composition, the "Messiah," which is being presented at I p.m. today in V\right .Auditorium on the East Carolina lniversit> campus under the direction of Dr. Rhonda Fleming. The performance will feature soloists Jackie Marin, Susan Coiner and Libby

Braxton, sopranos, and Sidney .Mitchell, tenor. Guest soloists will be Carolyn Ipock and Susie Pair, mezzo-sopranos, and Jerry Jolley, bass. The orchestra is" composed of students from the ECU School of Music, community musicians and players from the Suzuki Siring Program. Todays performance will additionally include those who wish to sing along with the chorus.

: ^ By El) BL \\( HE 7 Associated Press Writer LONDON lAPi David Essex, who played Jesus ^Christ in "(iodspeil" and Che Guevara in "Evita." is set to play another rebel in a musical version of "Muliny on the Bounty " which he plans to open in London next spring

An unlikely subject tor a musical, perhaps., but tor ;someone who had a hit song in Latin "Oh What a Circus " Irom "Evita' -anything is possible.

In this case, ('apt Bligli and Fletcher Christian are cast as latent lovers who tall out becau.se Christian tails tor a South Seas beauty, thus .triggering a mutiny that symbolizes the social up-. heaval that grippedBritain at the end of the 18th century.

"I've wanted to write a musical on. a hig-scak for a long time. " Essex said in an interview . "We went through several ideas - would you believe The Third Reich" that sort ol thing. But noneot them worked like this one, I wanted something with passion'"

Essex plays Christian in the SI 5 million musical, scheduled to open m London _ in May, and then Broadway.

: Frank Finlay plays Bligh,

"Vou ve got to live a little

dangerously. " Essex said.

Essex lias written the : songs and music tor the ; 2'j-hour show Richard 'Crane, former resident dramatist with London's .prestigious National Theater.

. wrote the book ."Singing somebody else's songs has become, a bit - shallow.'" Essex said. "I 7 needed to do something in which! was in control,"

The son ot a London dock ; worker, the :i5-year-old Essex has built a reputation 7 i'n the last 12 years as a rock 7 singer and songwriter with 20 7 hits, a musical star, movie : actorand record producer.

He started writing the 7 ^Mutiny" score in January 7 and spent months re-7 searching contemporary re-; cords of the 1789 Bounty saga

and the music of the period.

"I got 'into the baroque music Vivaldi and those . guvs, " he said. "It lelt so period' that I didn't want to rock It up "

He flew to Tahiti, a central location in the Bounty epic, to soak up a little at-7 mosphere and find oiit what ; ihe natives were into.

"That took a little time."

: he said. "They have these -'arcane rhvlhms. Its not 4-4 : lime at all. Its every man : for himself.

; "It was weird - neurotic Frenchmen in a very gentle

Pacific paradise." he said. "But I can imagine what it was like for the Bounty sailors to land there after 1*8 months at sea. Thats how the whole thing fell apart for (apt. Bligh.

"From what Ive learned, there was no real reason for the mutiny. Christian was disillusioned and wanted to jump ship on his own."

Bligh's 4,000-mile voyage in a longboat after the mutineers threw him off the ship was an unsurpassed feat of navigation. Essex said,

"If the shows about anything. it's about a clash of ideals and cultures," he said. "Both Bligh and Christian were trapped indheir roles at a' time of great change. George III had just lost the American colonies. There were riots in London, Everything was up in the air. Christian represented the new man, Bligh the old.

"Both men were symbols of the age. There was also an undercurrent of homosexuality between the two. Bligh was iipset when Christian fell in love with a native girl."

Getting it all down in a form fit for musicals was difficult. Essex admits. "With musicals, you've got to use broad strokes. But I think weve been able to portray Bligh and Christian as they havent been before."

Essex has released an album of the Bounty songs, eight months ahead of the planned opening, with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra 7

Auditions Set For 'Oliver'

WILLIAMSTON - Auditions for Martin Community Players forthcoming production of "Oliver" will be held on four dates in December in the music room of Wjlliamston High School.

The auditions will be at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 19 and Dec. 22, and on Dec. 27 and Dec. 29.

"Oliver" will be MCP s annual large musical production. and will involve a cast of 70, with hall of this numb^. to be adults^^nd the other half children, age 6 and up. Also needed are technicians of all kinds.

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9. "'Vou Look So Good In Love, George Strait

10. "Black Sheep," John Anderson

WASHINGTON. N. C -Love and relationships are the topics of attiludinal therapist Sammye Souder, on the Kay Currie Hospitality. House show today from noon to 12:30 p.m. Souder is a teacher-at Craven Community College and Carteret Technical College.

Another guest on the show will be Alice Padgett ot Stantonsburg, who will discuss cosmetics appropriate for the holiday season. The final segment of the show will be excerpts from "Brainstorm," the movie filmed recently in Wilmington. The shot will give an insight into the complex camera system used to achieve special effects and will also show various locations of the filming.

Hospitalitv House is aired over WITN-TV, Channel 7, Washington.

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CHARLOTTE - The Christmas ballet. "Ntcracker. will be performed at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday in Ovens Auditorium. The show features dancers from the N. C. School of the Arts under the direction of Robert Lindgren. The Charlotte Symphony Orchestra is under the baton of assistant conductor Jordan Tang.

Orchestra and mezzanine seals are $11 for adults and $9 for children under 12. Balcony tickets are S9 for adultsand $7 for children. For ticket reservations call 704/332-6136.

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Sports This Week

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9 NFL Footbdl Corerafe of Seattle at New York Giaite or aeveland at Hoostoa (S hts.)

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1;N9 NCAA FsotbaO Divialoo ! AA numoiooship (from Wich-iU Falls. Tei.)(J hrs.)

i revino A Kii

Lee Trevino, whose insightful golf commentary and boundless enthusiasm for the game made him an instant hit as a rookie member of NK Sports' golf coverage team in 1983. has signed a new multi-year contract with the network

The affable Dallas, Texas, native, who has a well-earned wputation as one of the games most successful and popular players, will be an integral part of all 11 professional golf tournaments to be covered live by NBC next vear

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1:410 NCAA BuketiMn Louisville at North Carolina State (2 hrs., min.)

1-W0 NFL Football Cincinnati Bengals at Minnesota Vikings (3 hn.)

4JI0A.CC.S^Ceatar MI0 Wide World Of Sports

Scheduled: Jeff Chandler /

Oscar Munit 15-EOUiid WBA Bantamweight Championship bout (live from Atlantic City, N J.k World Rhythmic Gymnastics (Championships (from Strasbourg, France). (1 hr., 30 min.)

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The Philadelphia 76ers travel to Milwaukee to play the Bucks in an NBA game airing on ESPN, Sunday, D. 11 (check local Ust-ings for time).

The Bucks have won the (Antral Division title for the last four years and was the only team to record a playoff win against the 76ers last year However, they were overpowered 4-1 in the Eastern Conference series.

Head Coach Don Nelson says that part of the teams success depends on the health of center Bob Lanier, who only saw action in 39 games last year due to knee surgery

Milwaukee battled severe injury problems all last year and had 163 player-games missed due to injury. 27 roster changes and 23 different starting line-ups However, Marques Johnson and Sidney Moncrief were All-Stars and Moncrief also won All-NBA honors and Defensive Player of the Year

(owboy At Heart

As Andy Richards in "The Young and the Restless, Steven Ford has been a gym teacher, agent and private investigator. In real life. Ford really knows the ropes, and proved it at the Ben Johnson-Red .Adair F I R E. Pro-Celebrity Team Roping and Cutting Horse Competition

At the event held recently in Houston. Texas. Steven joined such celebrities as James Caan. Larry Wilcox and Bob Eubanks Proceeds were sent to the Sunshine Kids Foundation, to enable children to attend their Winter Olympics in Winter Park, Colo., in February

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Nelson was named Coach of the Year, to which he said: Its probably the nicest thing Ive ever won. I had heard that there were about four or five guys that had a chance for this and 1 was one of them. It really would have been enough to know I was one of them. It really would have been enough to know that I was considered among the top five or so.

Milwaukee exudes veteran savvy, and with the addition of first-round pick Randy Breuer, the " Sixers will have their hands full.

Moncrief and Mark McNamara, tne Sixers' 7-i second-year man, both made recent contributions in film.

Moncrief joined his college coach, Eddie Sutton of Arkansas, and former UCLA standout Ann Meyers to make a basketball instructional film for Special Olympics. I usually don't have a good rapport with kids," said Moncrief "But these kids arent afraid to show someone they care. These kids showed me so much love, it just felt natural to show them some. The kids really picked me up."

McNamara served as a stand-in for 7-foot actor Peter Mayhew. who portrayed Chewbacca in the

Return of the Jedi. Mark isnt hanging up his sneakers yet. "Its kind of hard to be an actor if youre seven feet tall," he explained. ' there arent too many roles available."

Surely, Head Coach Billy Cunningham would like McNamara to play a major role in helping the Sixers become the first team in 14 years to repeat as World Champions.

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"The MacNeil-Lehrer News-hour" prides itself on having topical, hard-to-get guests on its show every night. In a 'Sesame Street" spoof being taped this week in New York. Robert Mac-Neil will interview the never-popular Oscar the Grouch and his sidekick Grundgetta about their latest business gimmick: selling ' S"-flavored ice creams, including such delicate flavors as Salami. Salmon Salad. Sausage. Sauerliraut, Spare Ribs and Spaghetti,

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(NICK)SpedalDeUvery (USA) Dragnet 7:300 Carolina Satnrday M*A*S*H

O Americas Top Ten 0ReflectioaB 9 Rock Qwrch 9 mid, inid Worid Of Animals (EaNjSportaCoder (USA) Dragnet 1:000 Morie That Touch Of Mink (1962) Cary Grant, Doris Day. A beautiful girl is offered an exciting trip by a wealthy and good-looking man. (2 hrs.) OO0TJ. Hooker g Star Search

O O Diffreot Strokes Drummond becomes attracted to a pretty, local TV aerobics instructor, g

O John Schneiders Christmas Holiday The Dukes Of Haz-zard star is joined by Debbie Allen, Larry Gatlin and The Gatlin Brothers, Bruce Jenner, and Van Johnson in a musical variety special from Sun Valley, Idaho. (1 hr.)

O The Jncrier Of Notre Dame

sheriff investigate a spate of local cattle mutUations. R (1 hr., 35 min.)

(NICK) Goii Great Meet the Puerto Rican band. Menudo, who are becoming a major pbe-Domenon in the U.S.; Justine Bateman of Family Ties; Sports School Olympic hopefuls get studies and top quality coaching.

(USA) Ovation Twenty-One" A group ot ttntish seven-ytan-olds were interviewed, reunited seven years later and interviewed again, and finally, they were interviewed a third time at the age of twenty-one. (2 hrs.)

8:050 NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at AtlanU Hawks (2 hrs., 15 min.)

8:300 O Silver Spoons Ricky uses his computer to figure the odds for betting on football games.

9 Jack Van Impe (NICK) The Third Eye Under The MounUin Mr. Jones voice seems to drift through the fog from the weird Wilberforce house, and the twins steal through the dark night to his rescue. (Part 4)

9:000 O Love Boat An internationally famous inspector makes suspects of all the crew members, an old schoolmate of Julie's meets father, and a passenger contends with his former girlfriend, g (1 hr.) (Christinas From Christ (Church An ecumenical celebration of (Christinas from (Christ Church in Oxford, England. (1 hr.)

Q The KGB: The Lie And The Truth

O Manimal Chase gets involved in the middle of a dispute between Appalachian residents and big city hoods who want to open up a gambling resort. (1 hr.)

O O Movie Death Hunt (1981) Charles Bronson, Lee Marvin. In the 1930s, a Mountie tracks a fur trapper wanted for

murder across the Canadian wUdemess. (2 hrs.) 9JimBakfcer

9 Itorie Our Town (1977)-Hal Holbrook, Barbara Bel Geddes. Based on the pUy by Thornton Wilder. Two young people experience the vicissitudes of life and deaih i a nal! New England town. (2 hn.) (SPN)TdepbooeAncthm (SHOW) Movie Shoot The Moos (1982) Albert Finney

(Continued On Page 12)

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, December 11

Sunday

Opinion

'Cabbage Patch Kids' - Is This An Era Of Love?

Say goodbye to the beautiful people; say hello to the homely people... their era is dawning.

You can see it coming,

Those -cabbage patch kids" are perhaps the homeliest dolls to ever hit the market, and merchants and the doll-makers say the demand is incredible.

They are "babies" only a mother could love ... a

strange soni)finother:affliat7The cabbage-palchers-

carry their likenesses to extremes; being identical except for the mop of "hair", and they are unisex ... one model serves all purposes.

They are a far cry from "Barbie" and sundry other frozen-faced beauties of the past, and bear no resemblance to dolls that used to say "ma-ma . or laugh. or cry. or wet a convenient dia per.

- \\nd yet. buyers arc reducing stores' inventories ' faster than the maker can keep up.

It must be love.

Homely dolls and homely people need that more than the "Other" kind.

1983

A&T's Nursing School Success Proves Pr^ress

North Carolina .A&T's .School ol Nursing has been accredited by the .National League ot Nursing and Chancellor Edward B. Fort calls it a "vindication" and the result of hard work.

The National League of Nursing issued.a two-year accreditation with warning in 1981 A team visited last October and the new eight-year accreditation was announced last week. The program is also now accredited on the state level.

It was recently announc'ed that 78,9 percent of the . nursing graduates had passed the state administered examination.

All ot us have an investment in all ol our state institutions of higher learning.'and every taxpayer should want to see such programs as the A&T School of Nursing do well.

It is obvious that great improvement has been made there and all North Carolina will benefit from what has been accomplished.

Hln

Thomoi

News

Alvin

Taylor

Sunday Morning Notes

The girl was working as a hostess in a local restaurant.

As usual this time of year I asked her if she were ready for Christmas,

She noted that she was indeed excited.

"You know." she said with a . laugh "Lm a senior in college.

and I stiiriook forward to Santa _C]aus."

She noted that she would go home for a few days, but she would be staying around town for most of the holidays to work.

"Well. ' 1 told her. "no doubt Santa will have a. nice gift waiting for you when you go home,"

"Yes." she laughed. "I have an idea Santa has already ^ven it to me - next semesters tuition," weli. a new car would be nice as a ('hristmas gift, but a college

degree is certainly more lasting.

I dont know much about cabbage patch dolls; in fact Ive never even seen on. But like the purple cow of poetic fame, I'd rather see than be one.

At any rate the dolls are sweeping the country So much so. in fact, that there were two classified ads in another paper. One offered cabbage patch dolls for sale at $250. The other offered one at $150.

Raggedy Ann. and even Barbie, never had it so good.

/

If Cabbage Patch dolls are in short supply, Moses H. Cone Hospital in Greensboro is trying to see that no doll owners suffer during Christmas season. Since Cabbage Patch dolls are hard to find, the hospital is providing "birth" certificates for any doll

during Christmas.

There is no charge and the certificate will give the dolls name, birth date, place of birth and the owners name. A footprint is included and the certificates will have an official signature. Those w'anting the certificates may call the hospital at 379-4131 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday,

The wind storm of last Tuesday night didnt do heavy damage but it did miiss up outdoor Christmas decorations. One friend who lives in a rural area said the wind lifted her Christmas wreath from the front door.

The w'reath rolled off with our friend in pursuit and finally came to rest in a bean field. It took some effort but it was finally retrieved-and alls right for Christmas once again.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President ReagM has not had a news conference since Oct. 19 - his 20th in office.

Since that time the Marine death toll has gone^up to 2M. from a terrorist bombing and from other hostilies in-Lebanon; a U.S. invasion oLGrenada; the start of deploymenf of Pershing-2 and cruise missiles in Europe, causing the' Soviet delegation to walk out of the Geneva talks ot intermediate range nuclear missiles; and an escalation Of violence in Lebanon.    ,    .    .    j

Reagan has made policy statements from time to tune, and taken a few questions on the run. but he has not subinitted to' full-scale questioning. Meanwhile. the= administration also' initiated an unprecedented blackout so that the media could not cover the first stages of the invasion of Grenada.

Reporters did not demand to be told that an invasion was In the making beforehand, although the press in the Caribbean had reason to believe a military action was afoot. But neither did they expect to be misled. A "no comment would have' sufficed.

Over the past several weeks, there have been reports that Reagan has been in high dudgeon over "leaks'to the press, and has ordered an FBI investigation of his staff to find out who has been talking to reporters. The inquiry also involves the use of lie detectors if thought necessary. -When asked when the president will hold a news conference, spokesman Larry Speakes tells reporters tersely

that when Reagan decides to hold one. he will announce it.

No president particularly relishes undergoing questioning. And yet. most have understood that there is a basic "people's right to know" what is going on and where his policies are' headed. No forma! speech can cover all the bases, and at best-is highly selective.

Meanwhile, Speakes has adopted a more confrontational style with the media. He has not had a real vacation in a long time and the strains are beginning to show.

He was kept in the dark when Reagan decided to move into Grenada, and his answers to inquiries the day before were not on target.    ,

Recently, he tried to convey the president s displeasure with chief economic adviser Martin Feldstein over the" question of the relationship between taxes, defense spending and deficits. But Speakes was so heavy handed that he appalled some of the White House insiders.

The message that Speakes was -conveying was correct: Aides said that Feldstein. chairman of the Council of' Economic Advisers, was not on board as a team player. But he used a tone of ridicule, and told reporters at one point with a smile: "I do not really think they actually asked him i Feldstein'to resign.    ^

In his own defense at a briefing. Speakes accused reporters of engaging in most of the ridicule, telling them "you should listen to your quips and your asides in that briefing, and we will see how balanced" the press is.

"Your quips are also part of the record and you are identified on the tapes of these briefings;" he warned.-So if you want to see who is the villain of these things that people-write about in the newspapers, 1 would urge you to look within."

But Speakes is the government's chief spokesman and what he says in public is taken as the official word from the White House. He has had to deal with critical foreign policy matters, and there has always been the question of how much access he has to the president when history is being played

*^^The solution fo the communications dilemma - if the White House does not like the image it is currently conveying - is. of>oarsc. to have the president do more talking for himself, and preferably more often.

Barry

Schwerd

Brzezinski Says Poland Looks ^Healthy'

WASH1N(;T()N ah i - contusing signals are coming out of communist Poland, but practiced Poland-watcher^ Zbigniew Rrzezinski. detectsli healthy trend.

The one time I' .S, national security adviser is cheered by his reading ol developments in the Polish underground, and he thinks there are positive opportunities tor the United States and the Polish pt'ople,

Something lascinating is happening inside Poland." Brzezinski said in a recent interview, it is- something altogether novel. An underground society is emerging."

The communist government cannot crush it. Brzezinski said, and the Reagan administration should encourage the

movement by lifting U.S. economic sanctions.

The news from Warsaw is not always that bright or clear. Recentlv. for instance. Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski. fearing anti-government d^fll^istrations, ordered special military units to move into cities and towns throughout the country.

But the same day. Lech Walesa, the Solidarity founder, held a news conference in his hometown of Gdansk and urged an end to the Western economic sanctions imposed after the 1981 military crackdown. "What Poland needs now is not losses of millions of dollars, but aid of billions of dollars," Walesa said.

President Reagan responded Wednesday by saying he

would give "immediate and serious consideration" to issues raised by Walesa,

Brzezinski says the United States should lift the sanctions.

"I feel we should lift them and in so doing we should explicitly say that we're doing it not because General Jaruzelski has been howling for this for two years, but because Walesa, the authentic voice of the underground society, has asked for it," Brzezinski said.

Since the Carter administration closed down nearly three years ago and he relinquished his office in the White House west wing, Brzezinski has maintained his deep interest in international events. And he keeps a sharp eye on Poland, his native land.

Paul

O'Connor

RALEIGH - Back when the first plans were being drawn for the new N.C Museum of Art, a controversy developed over the site for the building.

The museum's building commissioners wanted to locate it in west Raleigh, out in the boondocks near the state fairgrounds. Opponents said the museum should stay

State Museum Of Art Shws Increase In Attendance

downtown, near the site of the original museum Put the museum in the suburbs, downtown ad\ ocates argued, and no one would ever go look at the pictures Attendance figures for the new mu.seum's first eight months of operation would appear to debunk that argument. The museum opened April 9 and by the end

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of November. 144.429 people had walked through the museum's front door. 'A guard stands there with a clicker counting heads. I

The attendance figures tend to indicate that location is not the problem people thought it might be. It's been shown that we can attract people to this side of town." said Sharon Brown, museum press spokeswoman.

She said that some visitors have told museum lobby hosts that the location just off the Raleigh Beltline makes it easier to reach trom out of town.

During its best , year downtown, the museum had .about 100,000 visitors, she said. This year, it is totally realistic to expect 200,000 visitors or more. "Of course it might not be fair to compare because were offering a whole lot more now." she adds. The downtown museum's peak year had-been followed by several lean years as the construction of the new facility was delayed and special exhibitions could be scheduled. The final full year of operation, fiscal year 1982, saw only 52,000 visitors.

Attendance the first weekend the museum opened hit about 20.000. But now that the novelty is wearing off. attendance is levelling off and it is possible to get a more reasonable picture of how many people will visit the $17 million museum, In October and November, the museum drew an average of 3.350 guests a week. If that pace is maintained, then attendance would average almost 175.000 a year - a figure which Edgar Peters Bowron. museum director, says would allow the museum to draw top flight

exhibitions.

Herb McKim of Wilmington, state manager for Democratic Ohio Sen. John Glenn's presidential campaign, no doubt endeared himself to the Republican Party when he sent out invitations for Glenn's recent trip to the state. Glenn "wants to build upon the good things President Reagan has started for the county." McKim wrote in the letter. (He probably also meant to say "country."

How's McKim going to explain that line if Glenn is

nominated to run against Reagan in 1984

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, three North Carolina congressional districts are among the 10 most manufacturing-intensive districts in the country. The bureau reports that the 10th District in the west has the highest percentage of employment in manufacturing in the country. The 8th District - southern Piedmont - is fourth most manufacturing intensive and the 5th District - around Winston-Salem - is the

eighth most intensive.

Other congressional districts standings released in November by the bureaii showed that the highest median family income in the country is probably to be found in Washington. D.C.. suburbs, A Maryland district has the highest and the two Virginia districts are also in the top 10. All are D.Q. suburbs. Those same districts compete with the districts of Manhattan. New York City, for the top spots in terms of college-educated residents.

James J. Kilpatrick

Republicans Will Need More Voters

WASHINGTON - The story goes that an interviewer once asked Willie Sutton why he robbed banks. Because, sir, Willie replied, "that is where the money is. The tale provides a handy text for today's sermon to the Republican Party.

This is my thesis: If the Republicans fail to mount a massive effort to register likely new Republican voters, the Republicans will take a drubbing in 1984. Such an effort will demand personal commitments of time and energy that go beyond the mere donation of money to a political action committee. The Republicans cannot win next year by giving at the office. They must get out their vote as they never have gotten it out before.

Let us begin at the beginning: The Republican Party is plainly the minority party. With remarkable unanimity, all the polls show about the same figures. Roughly 40 percent to 45 percent of those over 18 regard themselves as Democrats; about 24 percent to 30 percent regard themselves as Republicans; the rest consider themselves independents.

Party affiliation is not an absolute determinant. In 1980 a large number of persons who regard themselves as Democrats voted for Ronald Reagan; a much smaller number of persons who regard themselves as Republicans went for Jimmy Carter. But when this element of contrariness has been acknowledged, the fact remains: In a national election, the

Republicans begin the race from behind the starting line. They must run catch-up all the way.

Here is a second obvious point: Presidentially speaking, 1980 and 1984 are two different ballgames. Reagan in 1980 was pitted against a weak and ineffectual opponent; he will not be so fortunate in 1984. This time around, it is Reagan who will be running as the incumbent with a record to defend - a record that includes, among other things, record-breaking deficit and a woefully high rate of unemployment.

Other elements are different. Reagan won only 6 percent or 7 percent of the black vote in 1980. He will win no greater percentage in 1984, but the black vote will be much larger. In 1980 al^t 46 percent of eligible blacks went to the polls. Jesse Jacksons bid for the Democratic nomination already has resulted in the registration of thousands of new black voters. Because presidential elections are decided by the state-by-state electoral vote, and not by a national popular vote, a turnout of 50 percent to 55 percent of the potentia black vote could make a critical difference. The Democratic Party, promises to be more united in 1984 than it has been in any election.sihce 1964. The old coalition of blacks, intellectuals, union members and lower-income families is forming anew. The impressive machinery of the AFL-CIO and the National Education Association will be put to work for the Democratic candidate.

Make no mistake: Democratic leaders perfectly understand the application of Suttons Law to the 1984 campaign. They will go after votes from blacks, Hispanics, welfare recipients and disenchanted women for one unimpeachable reason: That is where the votes are.

Such savvy fellows as David Broder of The Washington Post and political analyst Kevin Phillips have sensitive ears; they have heard faint and far-off rumblings of a possible Reagan landslide in 1984. My ears hear no such thing. My instincts tel) me that if Republicans fail to get their folks registered in such key states as Texas, California and Florida, they will be in deep trouble next year.

Campaigns to register new voters and to get them to the polls are difficult undertakings, and they usually are disappointing. Jesse Jacksons efforts may be an exception to thkt rule; blacks have a clearer perception of their political self-interest than whites do, and they are all fired up.

A Republican registration drive necessarily must concentrate on middle-income whites and Hispanics, conservative women and young people, and non-union families. When they call on such prospOTts, GOP workers will be obeying Suttons Law. Tell em Willie sent you.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate    ,





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O4O0ISpy O O Thats Incredible P.M. Magaxine Special Edition A profile of 320-lb. professional wrestler Hulk Hogan, o O Mac Davis Special; TV Music Of Christmas Barbara Mandrell. Ronnie Milsap. and Gladys Knight & The Pips join Davis for a concert of traditional holiday music at the First Prbyterian Church of Hollywood, Calif. (1 hr.)

O CD A Charlie Brown Christmas Animated. Charlie Brown becomes disillusioned by his friends' commercial attitude toward Christmas as the Peanuts gang prepare for a holiday pageant. (R)

0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A 0 Making Of Mankind Anthropologist Richard Leakey traces the emergence of modern man, exploring the earliest art and examining the reasons for the transition from a nomadic to a settled pattern of life, g (1 hr.) (SPN) Photographers Eye (SHOW) Faerie Tale Theatre Rumpelstiltskin Herve Vil-

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(B0) Movie "Blinded By The Light (iv80) Kristy McNichoi, James Vincent McNichoi. A middle class family is tom out of their comfortable existence when their teen-age son renounces everything they hold dear to join a religious cult. (1 hr., 29 min.)

(NICK) TV mni Eye Under The Mountain Mr. Jones' voice seems to drift through the fog from the weird Wilberforce house, and the twins steal through the dark night to his rescue. (Part 4)

(USA) Movie Desperate Intruder (1983) Meg Foster, Nick Mancuso. A blind woman living at a lonely beach house gives sanctuary to an escaped convict whose ruthless partner is on the way. (2 hrs.)

8:05 0 Christmas Gold Gene Kelly hosts a winter wonderland of "Gold Record" Christmas melodies performed by the stars who made them memorable including Bing Crosby, Pat Boone, Johnny Mathis and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. (1 hr.)

0:30 Raggedy Ann And Andy The Great SanU Claus Caper The two rag dolls journey to the North Pole to outwit Alexander Graham Wolf, a villain determined to sabotage Christmas.

O O Dr. Sobs How TV Grincfa Stole (Vistmas Animated. Boris Karloff narrates the story of the miserly Grinch who tries to deprive the tiny village of Whoville of Christmas. (R) (SPN) Post Time (NICK) TV Tomorrow People The Heart Of Sogguth A force seeks to control the minds of the Tomorrow People. (Part 2)

94O07OOaab O O NFL Footbal] Green Bay Packers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers g (3 hrs.)

The Daily

MervGhffio

O O Movie Little House On The Prairie: Look Back To Yesterday (Premiere) Michael landon. Matthew Laborteaux. Tragedy strikes the Ingalls family when it is discovered that Albert is suffering from an incurable, and fatal, blood disease. (2 hrs.)

O 0 AfterHASH Dr Pfeiffer contends with an abrasive patient who seems to have nothing physically wrong with him. 0JimBakker

0 Great Performances Callas: An International Celebration The memory of one of the world's greatest divas is honored by Joan Sutherland, Kiri Te Kanawa, Placido Domingo and others; also, rare film clips of Maria Callas in performance are featured. (2 hrs.)

(SPN) Meditemneu Echoes (SHOW) Movie My Favorite Year" (1982) Peter OToole, Jessica Harper. A dipsomaniacal former matinee idol has diffi-cuity coping with tiie pressures' of a live TV performance during television's golden age. 'PG' (1 hr., 35 min.)

(NKX) At TV Met: Metropoli-

tu Csti The fact and fancy of cats as animals and artifacts are revealed in this amusing look at one of mankind's most mysterious companions.

0:050 ACE Awards Live from Beverly Hills, California, a ceremony honoring top achieve-meiits in national cable programming and performances, as well as excellence on a local and regional level. (2 hrs.)

9:300 O Newhart Dick s attempts to finish a book assi^-ment are frustrated by annoying interruptions from Kirk, George and a possibly permanent boarder.

(HBO) Not Necessarily TV Year In Review

9:35 (NICK) Josn Miro; Thestre (H Dreains This documentary Ukes a look at the unique style of this 20th-century Spamsh painter, one of the world's most prominent Surrealists. (1 hr.)

10:00 News O 0 Emerald Point N.A.S. Adm. Mallory confronts Maggie as the Navy prepares a burial service for the body of her returned husband, and Jack announces to Celia that he is leaving the service. (1 hr.) .

0 Lester Sumrall Teaching (ESPN) Skiing "FIS World Cup" Men's downhill (from Schladm-ing, Austria) (1 hr.)

(USA) Powerboat Racing "World Off-Shore Champion ships (from Key West, Fla,). (1 hr.)

10:30 O Together Shirley And Pat Boone

0 Jerry Savelle (SHOW) Best Of Bizarre 20 (HBO) The Unexpurgated Benny Hill The wild and wacky British comedian portrays various characters, including a circus-clown and a French exchange student, in numerous sketches (1 hr.)

10:35 (NICK) Women In Jaxr TV Vocalists From Bessie To Kllie

The jazz tradition is traced from its earliest roots - the black spiritual music of a New Orleans gospel choir to Billie Holliday and the merging of the big band style and the blues.

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0 Introdnctkw To Life 0DoctorWho (SPN) Medicine Man (SHOW) Movie Just Before Dawn (1981) George Kennedy. Chris Lemmon Five young people on a camping expedition find themselves in the midst of a bizarre family of animal-like mountaineers R' (1 hr. 30 min.) (ESPN) SportsCqnter (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents 11050 News

11:10 (NICK) Great Poets, Great Writm Featured: Herman Melvilles Moby Dick.

11:15 (ESPN) Sidelines A magazine show featuring up and coming athletes, novel sports, event wrap-ups, and athletes who are active in fields outside of sports. 11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Topic horror Guests: Stephen King, screen writer for Carrie and "The Shining; George Romero, film director for Night Of The Living Dead^; Tom Savini, who did special effects for Friday The 13th."

11:30 0DobieGillis nicteO(TVNight O O Best Of Carson Host: Johnny Carson Guests: Burt Reynolds. Charles Nelson Reilly (R)d hr.)

O Hart To Hart Jennifers life is endangered when she is assigned to write about high fashion. (R)(l hr., 10 min.)

0 Entertainment Tonight The Comniodorcs discuss the effect of Lionel Richie's absence 0 TV Blackwood Brothen 0 Monty Pythons Flying __

(SPN) American Baby (HBO) Movie "Still Of The Night" (1982) Roy Scheider, Meryl Streep. A psychiatrist becomes inceasingly involved with a mysterious woman who was the mistress of a murdered patient. 'PG(lhr., 30 min.) 11:350 The Catlins 11:45 (ESPN) Soccer NCAA Division I Championship" (from Fort Lauderdale. Fla) (R) (2 hrs.)

12:00 O Bums And Allen OQONews O The Rockford Files 0 JimBakker

(SPN) Microwaves Are For CotAing

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12:050 Movie "Freud " (1963) Montgomery Clift. Susannah York. (2 hrs., 35 min.)

12:30 O Jack Benny O B 0 ABC News Nightline O O Late Night With David Lettennan(R)

(SPN) Companion Dog Training (SHOW) Movie "Love At First Bite" (1979) George Hamilton. Susan Saint James. (1 hr., 40 min.)

(USA) Sports Probe 12:40 Q Columbo A fading actress (Anne Baxter) plots the murder of a gossip columnist (Kevin McCarthy). (R)(l hr., 20 min.) 1:00 OI Married Joan O More Real People OONews

Vietnam; TV Ten Thousand Day War

OThkkeOfTVNight 0 Jerry Barnard (SPN) TV Life Of Riley

Sunday. December 11. 1983 TV-5

(HBO) Movie Breaker Morant (1980) Edward Woodward. Jack Thompson. (1 hr, 46 min.)

(USA) Countdown To '84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates (R)

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C. Sunday. December 11,1983

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TWO GO CARTS T 'wdh 5 horse ' power Briggs and Straton engine ^ and 1 without engine 2 pinball ; machines 746 6083 after 3pm    I

TWO 30 30 RiIS with~sTopes ' Savage and Marlm, S150 each Call I 752 3856    '

DOUBLEWIDE, 24x60, large family room with woodstove, central air, microwave, underpinning and lots of extras Excellent condition $19,900 Owner.'financing available Call 752 7860':

FOR SALE OR RENT: 1977 12x70 mobile home Possible home tinanc ing Call 756 9938 anytime.

MOBILE HOME AND LOT.

Located Homestead Estates, 1972, 12x65 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished $14,300 756 0975

MOBILE HOME 14x70 Oakwood 3 bedrooms 2 baths, total electric with heat pump Can be seen at Stancill Trailer Park Assume loan, no equity Excellent condition unfurnjshed Phone 756 6022 days, 752 1299 evenings

TYPEWRITER FOR SALE tan

manual. Remington, newly cleaned and reconditioned types like new priced at iust $125 Cad 752 4348

ULTRA LIGHT Weed Hopper Less than 15 hours tlight. time Call 752 0154

USED WHEEL CHAIR, 24 Amen can Touristor Luggage, Call 756 6356

WALLPAPER SI 50 $3 00 per single roll Odd lots and discontinued i papers Name brands, values up to . $20 a Single roll All sales final Larry s Carpetland, 3010 East lOth : Street

WASHER AND DRYER avocado Very good condition $225 Phone 752 3619

WASHIN'G MACHINl^~Wh,rlpool good condition, $125 Zendh black and white TV remote control $100 needs some work Call 752 0490 alter 6.30pm    '

WHIRLPOOL WlASNER, 2 n'lOhihs old. with 1 year warranty Love seat, 2 maple dining room tables 753 4121

NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooTns, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling. Carpeted, ,appliances total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month    '    x

CROSSLAND HOMES

63U West Greenville Boulevard . 756 0191

" 'JRADEWIND CANYOUBELIEVEITSALE!

Can you believe it NO MONTHLY PAYMENT until APRIL 1984!

Can you believe it 2x6 walls on 16" centers with DUKE POWER PACKAGE which allows you a DISCOUNT at CP&L!

Can you believe it Doublewides at

inyQ'i u prices! ................

WHITLEY'S CUSTOM Meat Cut ting Custom cutting beet pork and deer Quick frozen I 946 2382 WOOD FIRED INSERT CostlO will sell tor $250 Used I vear Car 752 3856

WOODEN CHICKEN COOP needed Call 758 7596 WOODSTOVE insert w,u he.i' .SOf square feet $475 C,in s6 66'6 anytime

YAMAHA RECEIVER and turnia ble, 2 Infinity speak.tv 555O Cai' 756,0199or 756 9550 ask for Dav d

WE VE GOT IT AT

Tradewind Family Housing Highway 264 Bypass Greenville, NC

CALL USOR COME BUY

919 756-4833

too MILLION PEOPLE sev. eas.,-. with Singer- Shoyidn t ,ou Specials for Christmas qiy'nq' Every model Sincjer- M.iTtrme- d-rs counted tor the Hoiidm,Seas-nn-* Save everytime you use it en|oy sewing, enjoy yOurm-A Singer Greenville Sew mg Cen*.,r Authorized Singer Dealer P.tt Plaza, Greenville 756 0747

14 KARAT, 1/5 carat marquis style engagement ring Good price For iKiore-i-nformjtipr,- CiTt; 7,6 -Tt?.!' ......

19" RCA^^LOR (V $200 'Call 756 7473

VETERANS! No Down Payment, LOW Monthly Payment. Low Inter osl Home Loans are Your Due For Honest and Faithful Service Let A Veteran Help You Get Your Due. Call Bob at 756 0191 8 to 8 or 752 0569 after 8 pm

WHAT A DEAL! 2 bedroors $715 equity and assume payments of under $155 month Defimtely a deal you can afford CJIII Sue at 756 0191 - from 8sY m to-8 p.m - - . .    - .

T5 X5o'"'"Bl    ath,

partially furnished, underpinned. Nice deck at rear In Branch Trailer Park Call 756 4632

12X5$, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, un furnished except for stove and refrigerator, set up in Shady Knoll, skirted with porch and outside .storagebuijding included. 758 2066.

12X6$ Deerbrook, 2 bedroom, Hu bath, furnished, central air, 752 6458.

12X65 1975 Titan, 2 bedroom, $4800. 746:3788,

1964 RITZCRAFT, furnished, air, carpet, washer Phone 758 4857.

1971 TWO BEDROOM. 1 bath, washer, dryer, air, underpinnmed. $3,000. Call 758 5277 after 4:30.

1976 ARNELL DOUBLEWIDE,

24x70. 2 full baths, 4 bedrooms. Take up payments, only 5 years remaining Small equity of only $2,000 down 1 238 3251

980 OAKWOOD, Shaggy Bark, 14x68 3 bedrooms. Low equity and assume loan. Negotiable. 758 1552

1980 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Set up at Branches Eitates. un derpinned, total electric with central air. Loan assumable Caii 756 8516 after 6 p.m

1981 TWO BEDROOM, 14x60, $500 equity and take up payments. Call 757 1677 after 5 p m.

1982 BRIGADIER, 14 X 58. like new. central heat and air, fully carpeted, washer dryer, partially furnished $11.500 or equity and assume pay ments. 746 2598 or 746 6790 8to5:30

077 Musical Instruments

PIANO a ORGAN CHRISTMAS

Sale! Save 20% to 50% off on all Major brands. Open Sundays! Piano & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard. Greenville. Phone 355 6002.

VIOLIN tor sale, % size. Excellent condition. Phone 758-5463.

WURLITZER home organ. 2 keyboards, synthesizer, automatic rhythm, $1600. Guitar, 6 string, Brazil made, carrying case. $80. Clarinet. $80. 1 825 5781.

1981 WURLITZER console piano. $900 Call 752 0151 days; 756 8233 nights.

078

Sporting Goods

BROWNING 12 gauge shotgun (Belgium), excellent cor $275. Call.757 2780or 752 7010

(Belgium), excel

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND _________

Winterville vicinity after 6 p.m

SMALL black puppy in Call 756 7486

093

OPPORTUNITY

1982 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air and heat, Shady Knolls Trailer Park, $15,800 Call 758 4476.

1983 OAKWOOD $75 and fake up payments Call 758 7652

1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148 91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sales. North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068

BUSINESSES FOR SALE in East ern N.C ...full service restaurants (3)..figure, salon transfer com pany .lGA grocery, neighborhood grocery.needleworksfencil shop beauty salon, convenience stores ( 2 ).. self ser vice car wash, clothing stores (2) fabric shop graphics firm fast food res taurant and others. For additional information, contact The Marketplace, Inc. through either Harold Creech in Greenville (752 3666) or Murray Bronstein in (Goldsboro (735 0603).

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Really, 752 2754,

077 Musical Instruments

BALDWIN PIANO, 5 months old tor sale or take up payments For more information call 752 2199

BUNDY FLUTE, excellent condi tion, $160. Call 756 0052

GEMEINHARDT FLUTE. $100 Call 756 3252.

LOWREY GENIE ORGAN

Excellent condition Financing available Call Atlantic Credit, 756 5185

LUDWtG-ORUMS 5-p:ece,^<ym bals, hardware, cases, $450. Call

! 752 7941

. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

2 USED GOCARTS tor salr.Oof single and one double se.d TTir 752 0874

23"-G E CONSOLE (010-^ TV dark walnut cabinet works qre,)l 'Just m time tor Christmas $100 Call 758 0626

remle

3 MONTH OLD Sony W control TV. $600 Hoouer. cleaner $120 Toaster HrOil $40 Call 7.57 7227

50" GE CONSOLE color TV Quart.-remote control xMth Lh.innr*! ry S^SOO ^36 98j2.

60 feet^Fre D R I c h product cases Aith compressors A'xsO'tfd produce dump t.ipivs m fop (Ondt -.jnn May,.,

Overton .Sup'^rmarki't pu    -lOi*)

or 758 7600

a

757 "Nineteen Eighty

THE. tech SmOP

8X12 UltLltY BUILDING .CTI-shingle roof blue .ind    $6x1

752 7258

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

A SACRIFICE movi' q Reduced ' 265 P,qr, 'wooded lof ,n Shady Kne; washer dryer s.'O.t-.bedrooms 2 ban-.s ie .drapes sofa $4900 ^r 'A

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PLASTIC SLIP COVERS

Custom fitted m home Heavy dear plastic Protects furniture from smoke dust, stains, wearing

J, AUSBY Sola and Chair Covered (4 Pillow's or lessiSSS.UO Ausby Plastic Covers 536-4793    Weldon

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

Off Highway 11 Across from Hardee's Ayden, North Carolina

1-slfiry. ('t'd<ir-sui('d Colduials

Fullv (iirpt'icd will) rantif / rflriLiiTdior turiiistifd

W .ihlii'F (lr\fr Itiiiik-ups

Kni ra\-ctlK H ill individu.ilh' roiiiriilli'd III .11 piiiiij),

Sp.fi mux. ll-in.iinMiiii (I

LMuiiidx .111(1 iiuiddiii xim.iu,

1 - Bedroom trom 8180

2 - Bedroom Irom 8195 8 - Bedroom irom 8215

Call for information and appointment:

Teresa Stallings. Manager

1:30-5 p.m. Daily Except Wednesdays.

AYI)K\S SEWEST MAE I MEM

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial & MarkeHng-ConsuWantST Irving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

OCEAN CONDOTEL conversion' Developer Investor to , convert 20 unit existing motel plus additional 20 to 30 units. Excellent opportunity in a market with few comparables Call owner, J M. Cornwell, Emerald Isle, 1 354 2800.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

093

OPPORTUNITY

o sellina volved. Just collect the profits from your protected retail locations. Re place sold stock. Very easy to maintain. High profit potential. $8760.00 minimum investment. Call Mr. Wilson 317 547 6463.

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP. GId Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 2S years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753 3503. Farmvllle.

MOBILE NOME SERVICE Open 7 days a week. Kenneth Manning, 746 2473.

RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, Inc

Dial 633 3121. New Bern. N C Certified Welders, precision Machinists, custom fabricators of Steel Aluminum, Stainless A R Plate. All types Machine Work Lathes, End Millers, Boring Mill, Iron Workers, Shears, Break, Rolls All types machine shop repairs Tanks, boat shafts, steel steps built to your specifications. Specializing in heavy equipment. Concrete mix er repairs, & Garbage truck packers

102 Commercial Property

SALE Highway 264 By Pass. Commercial Property, Highway frontage on 264 and Evans Street Richard D. Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834.

SALE to acres and 20 acres Both zoned R 6 Richard D, Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834.

SALE OR LEASE 17,000 square foot building on Memorial Drive acreage available, will divide tor tenants Richard D. Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834.^ ^    .

SALE OR LEASE - Commercial lots, will build to suit tenants Rivergate Shopping Center. Rich ard D Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834

375 SQUARE FEET of retail store front on the mall. Available imme diately. Rents tor $234 per month. Call Clark Branch Management. 756 6336.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

REAL ESTATE & FARM EQUIPMENT

AUCTION

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29

John Norville Estate

Falkland, N. C. Pitt County DIRECTIONS: From Falkland, NC take Highway 43 North for 3 miles, turn left on S.R. 1253, go 1V4 miles, sale site on left. Watch for auction signs leading to sale.

10:00 A.M.

FARM EQUIPMENT

TRACTORS AND TRUCKS COMBINES

BULK BARNS

2:30 P.M.

REAL ESTATE

APPROX. 110 ACRES IN 6 TRACTS BRICK HOME WITH APPROX. 1500 SO. FT.

Sale Conducted By

Harris Realty & Auction Service

Rt. 4, Box 281G    Nashville,    NC    27856

John Tugwell, Agent

Phone 257-1426, Days    446-0514 Nights

WATCH THIS PAPER FOR MORE DETAILED LISTINGS

Free Service!

Toyota Trucks for 84... reidesigned, larger, more powerfu than ever before.

Buy yours this month anid get absolutely free:

Toyota East Maintenance Agreement

4 Years/50,000 Miles

Mechanical Breakdown Warranty

3 Years/Unlimiteid Miles or 5 Years/60,000 Miles

Free service, free maintenance for 50,000 milesonce you buy the truck, all you pay for is gas.

Whats more, with approved credit, you can finance with:

No Monthly Payment til February!

lOVOTAEi^

t

109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228  ^-

102 Commrcial Property

FOIS LEASE. ommVcial storagt space available immediately. New brick building, sprinkled, heated, concrete floor, 2 loading docks, security alarm system, 14,000 square feet. $1200 per month. Cel! 7524915.

FOR SALE: 5,000 square toot commercial building In the downtown area. Currently leases for $1400 per month. Call CEN TURY 2) Tipton 8. Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

104 Comlominiums For Sale

CONDOMINIUM for salel 3 bedrooms, 2f/2 baths Windy Ridge Phone 756 5630.

LIKE CONDOMINIUM living? Set tie in this Cream Putt 2 bedrooms, Hz baths, attractively decorated family room, neat and cheerful kitchen Immaculate. Excellent conditon Wall paper and carpet almost like new! Extra storage. $35,000 Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. nights Mary 756 199?, Lyle 756 2904.

106

Farms For Sale

PITT COUNTY FARM *05034, Highway 11 Frontage 1500 feet, approximately 96 acres. Tobacco poundage 7,547. Sealed bids being accepted until December 30, 1983. Owners reserve the right to accept or reject any and all bids. Mail to Farm, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.

160 ACRE FARM with 74 cleared, 10,700 pounds tobacco allotment and 4000 feet of road frontage. Located 2 miles south of Bethel on NC 11. Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500; nights Don Southerland 756 S260.

21 ACRES 18 CLEARED. 5.454 pounds of tobacco, 2,455 pounds of peanuts Located hear The Belvoir Grammar School. Excellent mobile home park site Contact Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

106

Farms Far!

161 ACRES adjoining N C 33 near Shephards Mill.

'owth.

Pactolus small pine grow

$41,300

Some

300 ACRES. 57 acres cleared, ap proximataly 6000 pounds tobacco. A good stand of growing timber, 243 acres woodsland located on Shepherds Mill Road. $212.850.

201 ACRES. 13 26 cleared, located on Shepherds Mills Road. $60.450

O.G.NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

D.G Nichols    758    2370

David Nichols    355    6414

250 ACRE FARM - 110 acres cleared. Falkland Highway, 43 West. 27,559 tobacco poundage Excellent farm or suitable for development. $375,000 Phone 752 7244 or 758 3807

107

Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT tobacco poundage and farm land in Pitt County 756 4634

109

Houses For Sale

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on over 1 acre (also available tor purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank tinanc ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756 5716

COUNTRY SPLIT LEVEL with 12 acres. Needs love and tender care Attention out door lovers blueber ry bushes, fruit trees, 3 bedrooms, 3 bajhs, family room, kitcjien and breakfast room combinafioiT molti purpose room, about S' z miles trom Greenville $90,000 Call Davis Real ty, 752 3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sale

A SET OF TWINS has convinced uk that wa need 4 bedrooms - so wa are selling our 1,600 square foot 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch, with deck, workshop, fenced yard and heat pump. 756-6935. No realtors.

ALOT OF HOUSE for just 573.900. Three bedrooms, formal areas, family room with woodstove and a garage. Wesfhaven I. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.

ATTENTION INVESTORS;

Conveniently located to shopping and schools. 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, 1 bath, recently painted, rented, neat and well kept! $18,500. Call Davis Realty, 752 300a nights Mary 756 1997, Lyle 756 2904.

AYDEN

MUST SELL Spacious home, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large den with fireplace (includes ^ Fisher wood stove), living room, large eat in kitchen, utility room. 2 car garage with storage room, large wooded lot. Ask tor more details. 2000 sq. ft. living area. Low $70's.

OLDER HOME. 4 bedrooms, kitch en, living room, bath on large lot. $18.000

LOTS, WESTWOOD Subdivision, water taps and septic tank permits. Large wooded lots, 2 miles weat ol Ayden Owner will finance

Ayden Loan & Insurance

Company, Inc

746-3761    746-6474

BAYTREE. New listing with possible assumable FHA loan Great room, dining room, three bedrooms, 2 baths, just like new $78,900. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322

SANTA WOULD BAG this 8x% assumption! Located past the T V statiori on-^Evans Extension -1ay equity and assume $51.000 mortgage Hignite, Realtors. 757 1969 anytime

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOW LEASING

University Medical Park Townhomes Brand New Luxury Apartments

* IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

2 Large Bedrooms

V/2 Baths

Heat Puihjp

Spacious Floor Plan

Washer-Dryer Hook-ups

Kitchen Appliances

Custom Buiit Cabinets

Patios with Private fence

Thermopane Windows E-300 Energy Efficient

Beautiful Individual Williamsburg Exteriors

Located Within Walking Distance of Pitt Memorial Hospital

Call 752-6415

Monday-Friday 9-5

SAFE^ Safe Buy lOUsedCars

Lincoln Town Car

(4) 1983 Previously Owned Lincoln Town Cars

All fully equipped .All carry remaining Low Mileage    warranty

1981 Mark VI

White with green leather interior, low mileage, local on owner.

1980 Mark VI

Fawn, 2 door. Fully equipped, leather interior, low mileage, local one owner.

1980 Lincoln Town Car

4 door, fully equipped, Excellent Buy!

1979 Lincoln Town Car

Fully equipped. Excellent Condition!

EAST

CAROLINA

UNCOLN-MERCURYGMC WMtEadClrck    GMWIik.    N.C.

TRUCKS

7M-42A7, ,

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For Love And Honor

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Vietnam: A felevion HBtory

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Telephone Auction

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Movie: "Victor/Victoria"

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Coaaa Basketball: Memphis State vs. Mississippi

The World Sportsman

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(SPN) This Is New Zealand (ESPN) College Basketball Memphis State vs. Mississippi (2 hn.)

(raO) Emmet Otters Jng-Band Christmas Fifty new Moppets are introduced in a heart-warming story about the love between an otter mother and her son. (1 hr.) .

(NICK) Against The Odds Henry Morton Stanley And David Livingston Amelia Earhart Sunely and Livingston were the

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1:290 Oe Happy Drag (1) Carol Bvnett And PrlHids (NKK) The Tomorrow Peopte The Lost Gods The Tomorrow People get an exotic new member from the Far East (Part 1) 94907l9Cbb a BlDy Oraham Christmas

turns a starving singer into the rage of 1950s Paris by billing her as Ekiropes greatest female impersonator. TO (2 hrs., 15 min.)

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l/fe.

Take A Closer Look At Western Steer

20 Of Your Finest USDA Choice Steaks From $1.69 To $6.79 42 item Salad Bar 4 Item Soup Bar 4 Delicious Sandwiches Tasty Desserts

f';

All Items To Go

Friendly Service

TV Chatter

By PoUy Vonctes

DENNIS WEAVER, who currently stars as Rear Admiral Mallory in the GBS drama series EMERALD POINT N.A.S., has taken the plight of Americas hungry to heart. For months he has been planning a program to provide large quantities of food for these needy families. He has arranged initially to provide about 26 tons of food a month through a program he calls LIFE - which stands for LOVE IS FEXDING EVERYONE. It really is a simple program and one that should be an inspiration to all of us. His plan consists of arranging for the pickup of dated food from some 200 local supermarkets and transporiing it to a center located in Los Angeles, where it will then be distributed to 19 church parishes. The churches, in turn, will distribute the food to needy parishioners.

DENNIS explained that because of the consumer protection laws, food items are dated and must be thrown away on the expiration date, though the products are still good. His plan is to pick up this food, Monday through Friday, and get it to the people in need of assistance. The plan is to be put into operation this month    .    .    ......

1942 (NKX) Gore Vldnl This politician, novelist, playwright discusses his work, including two subjects which fascinate him most politics and religion. (1 hr., 5 min.)

10490Bioodie SI Jotai Osteen

(USA) CoBrtdown To 24; Sarajevo And Los Angdet Highlights

and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitioiM, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates. (R)

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(USA) Alfred mtchcock Pre-aents

11:10 (NICK) Great Poeta, Great Writers Featured: Walt Whitmans A Song Of Myself.

11:12 (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments Super Bowl HI - Colta vs. Jets (R)

11:22 (NICK) First iklltiOB Gut; Seymour Hersh, author of The Price Of Power: Kissinger In The Niion White House.

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Title
Daily Reflector, December 11, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30661
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95553
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